New FISA Bill Would Grant Telcoms Immunity; Vote Is Tomorrow
An anonymous reader writes "This just in: a new 'compromise' FISA Bill (PDF) was just made public, which, the Electronic Frontier Foundation reports, 'contains blanket immunity for telecoms that helped the NSA break the law and spy on millions of ordinary Americans.' The House vote is tomorrow, June 20. After all the secret rooms and everything ... if they get immunity and the public never finds out what happened, the only other logical next step is to convince everyone I know not to get an iPhone." CNN covers this get-out-of-lawsuit play as well.
/.ers will complain. Telcos will continue helping to spy.
Film at 11
Knowledge is power. Knowledge shared is power lost.
He can put a stop to this.
866-675-2008 option 6, if you don't get a person then, press 0. If you get a voicemail, leave a message, then call back and dial 0 during the voicemail prompt to get a human.
Let them know:
-You are a progressive.
-Civil lawsuits are the ONLY remaining route to disclosure for the spying the bush administration perpetrated on americans.
-What the telecommunications companies did was ILLEGAL.
-He should call Hoyer and Pelosi to stop this RIGHT NOW. One phone call from the head of the democratic party should kill this nonsense.
If you have donated in the past, let them know that you will seek to have your donations returned if he does not speak out on this issue. If you haven't, let them know that you will refuse to donate or organize in the future if he refuses to take the lead on this issue.
The first step to making democrats strong on national security is standing up to republicans.
http://clerk.house.gov/member_info/mcapdir.html
Email does NOT have the same impact as a phone call.
512 MB RAM, 20 GB disk, 200 GB transfer, five datacenters. $19.95/month.
Don't worry about breaking the law. As Nixon said, "If the President does it, it's legal."
In my ideal world, the people who make and enforce the rules would be held to a higher standard than the proles who merely have to follow the rules. It's bad enough when the infraction is minor like a cop doing 20 over the speed limit but when we're talking about the crimes committed in this case, it's the sort of thing that erodes faith in our very society.
I know there are people who say that there shouldn't be trials after Obama is elected, that it would be divisive and bad for the nation. Those people can kindly go fuck themselves. That same logic was used to praise Ford for not investigating Nixon. That same logic was used to praise Clinton for not seriously investigating the scandals of the Reagan and Bush administrations. All this did was let the same shit-weasels get back into positions of power the next time a Republican slithered into office. No. As a nation, we need hearings, we need trials. Bush and his henchmen need to answer for their crimes. A standard needs to be set in stone: we are a nation of laws, not men, and no man is above the law. Even Presidents will be forced to account for their actions and pay for their sins.
This will be part of our process for reengaging with the world. We've burned a shitload of bridges over the past eight years. When everyone can see an American President sitting in jail for his crimes, they'll know that justice has returned.
Kwisatz Haderach
Sell the spice to CHOAM
This Mahdi took Shaddam's Throne
The issue of 'wiretapping' the Internet seems to be a bit like gun control. If you make it hard to legally own a gun, you make it harder for innocents to protect themselves from criminals.
Basically, with encryption technology being what it is and open source being what it is, it is possible for those who want to conceal their data from the government. Thus, they will.
So, really, where does this put us?
1) Stupid criminals may get caught.
2) Innocents may get falsely IDed through whatever automated filtering is done on unencrypted traffic.
3) Those that have the foresight to think that they may not want their data to get intercepted will utilize the free, existing encryption tools to protect themselves.
So, basically the people that are actually skilled enough to be dangerous are unaffected by this.
Could the value for the NSA only come in if they specifically targeted a specific suspect host's traffic and applied a lot of processing power to brute forcing the encryption? If that is what they are after, I see value to national security and convicting criminals.
If it is anything else, it seems very misguided. However, there was a lot of money put into Carnivore so who knows.
They will pass it, and the majority of Americans will go blissfully along, acting like everything is fine. The really interesting thing here, and we all know this, is that these tools for control that have been put in place in the last 8 years are mainly for control of the American people, not for any sort of "war on terror" or protecting us from Al-Qaida. The bigger lies are more easily believed. Keep waiving that flag!
We play the game with the bravery of being out of range
Technically speaking, the bill doesn't provide for amnesty. What that bill does do is require telcos to provide the letters the Bush administration gave them that said the programs were legal. Essentially, if the telcos can prove that Bush et al. told them this was legal, they get off the hook.
So I suppose if the executive branch told your company it was legal to do anything, you'll never be held accountable for your actions.
That's a pretty dangerous precedent. Why doesn't Bush let our oil companies know it's legal to drill in ANWR? He can give them the CYA letter and off they go.
McDermott, Jim WA 7th 225-3106
The woman who answered the phone says that he is against retroactive immunity.
That's one vote against it.
I agree I have not seen anything talking about US citizen to US citizen calls. For example if I were to call my mother in Boston from New York. As for the US government spying on a call from the US to Afghanistan...well I think that is fair game because that call would be on other countries networks also, for example, Briton, Germany, Turkey, Iran, and then Afghanistan. So you have no guarantee at all that none of those countries would not be listening in also.
I smoked pot once. But I DID NOT inhale. Will you hire me?
the actual discussion should be covering calls between an American citizen and someone on a watch list who NEEDS his calls tapped
If someone NEEDS his calls tapped, law enforcement can get a warrant. That's how it's supposed to work here.
Stop fearing the terrorists; they want you to be afraid, but they're toothless. Bush's senseless war in Iraq has killed more Amerricans than all the terrorists this century. Meanwile ten times as many people die every year on American highways. IMO anybody who drives an SUV needs to be on a watch list and have his phone tapped; (s)he's far more of a danger to me than any Muslim terrorist.
And some of that "homeland security" money needs to go to guard rails!
mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
This law is an Ex Post Facto law, making what was an illegal act legal, so if this law passes, it should be unconstitutional as per Article 1 Section 9 of the Constitution.
Note that judges have somehow taken that "No bill of attainder or ex post facto Law shall be passed." sentence to mean that ex post facto laws that make the punishment worse are unconstitutional, but that isn't what the constitution says. Maybe that is one of those hidden things like in amendment 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 9, 10
If I have nothing to hide, don't search me
Don't you think that it might send a bigger message if, for example, Obama could come to the floor with a list and/or recordings of say, 15-20000 phone calls saying that they're switching parties to vote for him because of bullshit legislation like this?
Playing to your own base is one thing. Playing to the enemy by showing you're up in their base, stealing all their votes is quite another -- and that's the sort of show stopper.
Who says you even have to actually be a Republican. Just call and say you're switching parities because of it. Then call your legislator and say the same.
Haven't even bothered to notice that Chris Dodd has slipped a provision into the housing bill that requires all internet businesses and payment providers to report their transactions to the IRS.
just all financial transactions
So you guys are all worrying about Bush wiretapping a few conversations so you can sue AT&T, while the government just grabbed all the financial data.
Way to go Democrats! You guys are the best!
This is my sig.
How about this? http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/intel/m071906.pdf
can you google? or are you just fucking lazy?
My Sig Sucks
"I'm gonna vote for the guy who doesn't make me feel stupid."
So you don't vote then.
So unless a senate vote forces the conference bill into committee (Which I THINK requires 60 votes), this bill can go from the house to the full senate without having to pass by Leahy's desk.
This vote, the recent one in Sweden, wiretapping, surveillance, censorship; governments across the western world basically totally ignoring long held principles for individual rights and freedoms. They keep doing it, and nothing seems to be able to stop it.
I'm led more and more to the conclusion that our system of democracy isn't working anymore. I don't know why, and I'm pretty sure it did work before. Governments usen't be able to get away with even proposing this nonsense. Whatever we had that worked before doesn't seem to be there anymore.
Don't get me wrong now. I still believe in democracy, at least I think I do. Is the kind I believe in the one we actually have, or ever had? I vote. I see others voting. But I still see a disconnect between the actions of government and the will of the people. What has gone wrong? Is it just my vision that's in error here?
Is the fact that this recent shift occurred contemporaneously with the rise of the internet a coincidence? Is it just fallout from 9/11? Or something more? Is it the media? The corporations? The fall of communism? Globalisation? Or is it just the fact that we have indeed reached true democracy, and the currently evolving system of oppression is in fact what the people truly want?
I think there's a problem with our democracy. Something is broken, and I don't know what it is. The end result is that democracy is not working the way it once did. Maybe I'm just a fool raised on too many fairy tales about the way things should work. I'd like to think that, but I do perceive the shifts in our society, laws, and governments to be very real. Either the west is collectively shifting into some other system of government, or the very concept of democracy is itself undergoing some kind of phase change.
May the Maths Be with you!
The most scary part of this bill is it allows a person, or company to entirely avoid legal ramifications by simply stating "I was only following orders."
If that argument is a credible one in America, then the country is more morally bankrupt then I ever imagined.
if they get immunity and the public never finds out what happened, the only other logical next step is to convince everyone I know not to get an iPhone.
Verily! That will show The Man who's boss!
The grass is always greener on the other side of the light cone.
The issue is that as soon as they took the program out from under the supervision of the FISA court it became nearly impossible for anyone to figure out who they were spying on or how sweeping and abusive the program became. It doesn't really matter if they were only listening to calls of foreign nationals, once they bypassed the courts they could spy on anyone they felt like and probably did. They violated the Constitution by spying on people without a warrant, period. When you let your government spy on you without court supervision, its really easy for your government to collect dirt on opponents to discredit and blackmail them, to snuff out dissent, to win elections, and then your representative Democracy is pretty much gone. We've been there before. Nixon and Hoover very nearly destroyed our Republic in the 60's and 70's which is why FISA was created.
By circumventing FISA the Bush administration was turning the clock back to a time when our government was abusively spying on people for no good reason. Since abuse was happening before FISA was created chances are its occurring now that FISA has been gutted. Chances are its even worse this time around since digital communications and computers make it possible to eavesdrop on a much larger scale than you could in 1968. Back then agents actually had to listen to and read everything. Now computers can sift through everything and kick out every email or phone call which has a keyword of interest.
I'm not sure I'm really that concerned about granting immunity to the telecoms. When the NSA and the President told them to do it, it took extraordinary balls to say no. Qwest did and their CEO ended up in prison partially because of his refusal to play ball with them. Qwest lost a big classified government contract because of their refusal to participate, their stock tanked and their CEO was charged for misleading shareholders because he couldn't talk about all this classified blackmail.
I'd be glad to let the telecoms go, as long as the people in the government who told them to do it go to jail, the people at the not, not the people in the middle or at the bottom. Throwing the telecoms in jails is about like throwing the privates in Abu Graib in jail. Its become clear the torture they were doing at Abu Graib and Gitmo was ordered by the highest levels of the Bush administration, especially Cheney and Addington. They should be going to jail, not the flunkies who did what their government ordered them to do in the panic post 9/11.
@de_machina
Yeah but any good network admin would know that sending a message from A to B to C is not as fast as just going from A to C. So yeah it would NEVER happen :)
I smoked pot once. But I DID NOT inhale. Will you hire me?
IIRC, this is HR 6304.
upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
One of the real problems is that people are ridiculously stupid and uneducated. I don't mean going through harvard/yale, I mean people actually researching issues. The kind of people who can acknowledge that both our republican and democratic candidates (all of them) are horrible horrible people, and our choices are merely between the lesser of evils.
So you guys are all worrying about Bush wiretapping a few conversations so you can sue AT&T, while the government just grabbed all the financial data.
I can't speak for Democrats, particularly since I haven't officially abandoned the smoking wreckage of the Republican party by changing my registration yet. However, since I have been worried about Bush and the evolving disaster of a presidency his administration has inflicted on the nation for the last 8 years, perhaps I'm a suitable proxy.
First off -- how exactly are you privy to the rough number of conversations the administration had wiretapped? What exactly is "a few"? 10? 100? A million (still just a fraction of a percent of Americans)?
Second -- what makes you think it's wiretapping in general people are averse to? I certainly don't have a problem with wiretapping done in accordance with the law. But see, that's not what we're talking about here. Otherwise, we wouldn't even be discussing immunity.
Third -- what makes you think the same people who are nervous about "extralegal" wiretapping wouldn't be nervous about the IRS having access to all payment data? Not that this is the same thing as handing stuff over to, say, the CIA, but I suspect your implication is a false dichotomy. It *does* make me worry if the state's asking for blanket access to financial transaction records without a warrant.
So I do appreciate the notice, really. Just not sure why you had to throw in the non-sequitur conclusions. Though by all means, if you have conclusive evidence about the number of illegal wiretaps, a general allergy to well-overseen and legal wiretaps, or that most people who are worried about wiretaps don't care about your news once informed, by all means, feel free to present it.
Tweet, tweet.
Your FISA court allows a warrant to be obtained after the wiretaps. They have three days to get the warrant after the tap is in place.
So if there's a dire emergency, they can tap immediately then get a warrant later. The rule of law still applies to these emergency wiretaps. That's a good thing.
The only reason to grant immunity retroactively then forbid investigation is that some illegal wiretapping went on and someone doesn't want you to find out what it was.
---
ECHELON is a government program to find words like bomb, jihad, plutonium, assassinate, and anarchy.
The big problem is not that it grants them immunity, it's that in doing so it blocks an investigation into what the Government was doing. Which of course is WHY the bill is granting them that immunity.
First, if you want an unruly crowd to listen, start with a meaningful point that is on-topic. Don't just start telling everyone they are stupid and ignorant. Read up on Socrates, read something about how to form an argument, how to pursuade people; becuase you obviously have no clue of how to do that.
I finally updated my sig, but now it's lame.
Today people are taught to pass tests, not to think. If people were thinking, they'd be dangerous. Since they aren't thinking, they're safe. Do you think it's a coincidence that the school system is set up the way it is?
The rare "thinking" people can't often thank the public school system for that. It is either due to some natural fluke, or parents that actually cared for and taught their children.
This is what democracy has always been. It is the most powerful groups dominating the smaller groups on particular topics. Usually, this is the largest number of people, the Divine Right of (50% + 1), dominating and controlling the minority. Other times, it is the politicians themselves. This is politics as an alternative form of civil war. This is democracy.
Formerly, there was a widespread understanding of this and what distinguished democracies from republics.
[Please note the capitalization below. It is significant.]
Here are two very similar scenarios.
A state wants to do something which is popular locally but anathema nationally. It goes up for a vote locally and wins. A republican (party unimportant) who lives elsewhere may think it a bad idea, but as he is not a citizen of that state it does not occur to him to try and stop it. A democrat (party unimportant) who lives elsewhere and disapproves of it, can and likely will try to galvanize support to suppress the law.
The federal government wants do do something, which has majority support, but that support is regionalized. It would be democratic to pass it and simply force all those opposed to obey. A republican (again, party unimportant) who thinks that something to be a good course of action in general, may be wholeheartedly opposed to federal action due to an abhorrence of forcing a people do what they themselves are opposed to.
I don't think I've been as clear as I could have been, or possibly at all, but I hope that the gist at least comes across okay.
Not sure how you can call that a "complete unknown", when its right out there in plain view for the whole world to read.
Not to mention 8 years in Illinois State Senate. Significant state, not exactly political kindergarten.
There's an autobiography, "Dreams from My Father", written before he entered political office. There's records of participation with community organizing groups, there's quite possibly a publishing record from when he worked at the Harvard Law Review or University of Chicago.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barack_Obama
Plenty to find out about. It's easy to see how much of this could have fallen under the radar of people who might not follow the minutia of politics closely. But to those he *stays* a complete unknown, it won't be because he's a blank slate, it'll be because people aren't doing their homework.
Tweet, tweet.
The people who have been attempting to cram this B.S. down the throats of the American public have no shame! The founding fathers must be spinning in their graves! These S.O.B(s). should be taken out into the streets and stoned to death by all freedom loving Americans!
My name is Inigo Montoya. You killed my Father! Prepare to die!
The psychopath always blames the victim. The psychopath never takes responsibility for the damage they cause, or admits to personal flaw or error. The psychopath says the most outrageous things which no rational human could ever say without feeling stupid and ashamed, and s/he does so with a straight face. This is possible because the psychopath is simply wired wrong.
Also, that's some very strange formatting and odd logical construction there, mister. Confused communication is also a standard hallmark of the psychopath. Did you also like blowing up frogs with firecrackers when you were a kid?
Who knows. Maybe you're just drunk and stupid. Whatever the case, you are hopelessly wrong in your assertions and anybody with a brain should immediately be able to see why. But it should be noted that the sociopath/narcissist/psychopath would be incapable of understanding why this is so; literally incapable --on a neurological level.
-FL
Actually, it's rather hard to imagine a student not wanting to subject themselves to being a member of the "pathetic specimen of human waste" club. It's a big and popular club and many children cry themselves to sleep at nights wondering why they couldn't be [stupid] just like everyone else. Many people don't CHOOSE to be thinking people. Many, such as myself, had no choice in the matter and I was a very miserable child as a result. I simply couldn't understand the things other kids did and I couldn't accept the things I couldn't understand.
It took me a LONG LONG time to shift my understanding to the realization that my being different was an advantage of sorts... even now, it's something of a disadvantage. I can't use Windows because it's a big mess inside of the black box and I know it can't be trusted while other people lead perfectly contented lives with Windows and simply accept that their personal information is available to any 'evil doer' determined enough to get it.
Meanwhile, learning how to think can actually be taught and it isn't taught very often.
Damn I had to no idea he was such an anti-gun nutjob until I read his Wikipedia page. I wasn't going to vote for him anyways due to his big-government predilections but he is really out there.
For all the "change" he claims to promote, he rarely seems to toe the Dem party line pretty well on the big issues. He's created this straw man of the typical politician, but I don't recall any of them coming out and admitting that they like lobbyists, soft money, backsliding, etc. How am I supposed to believe that he's different when his positions on the things that are easier to call him on are so typical?
If you really want to make an impression don't email it, they see an email and think that someone just copy and pasted and emailed, not very highly motivated.
Ideally would be to hand write your message and snail mail it. Unluckily they have a workaround in place against this (vote is tomorrow).
Take your hand written letter and FAX it to your representative, ideally from home but if you don't have a modem or fax machine there used to be lots of fax gateways on the net. Hopefully they are still there.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
All I know is that we just had a 5-4 supreme court vote in favor of law and order. If McCain won, that balance will probably tilt into 4-5 hell. I know Obama would appoint someone that favors the rule of law. The fact that he's much more pro-civil rights is just sweet icing on the cake. I'm willing to just say fuck it when it comes to health care. I oppose national health care, but I care a lot more about civil rights. And, since any Republican is going to outspend any Democrat, it seems that the money might as well go to health care.
Cow Cube
I can't beleive the Dems rolled over on this...
I'm a democrat and I am ashamed that Reid and Pelossi(sp?) rolled over on this like they have on other things.
My only unfounded hypothesis on this is that the illegal wiretapping was also performed on Congressmen/Women and so if they investigate then they uncover their own scat.
Conspiracy theory...? maybe, but I'm open to other suggestions why our Democratic Party is rolling over like a an old Ford Explorer with faulty tires on it.
Beware of those who profit off the docile and persecute the unbelievers.