Obama Losing Voters Over FISA Support
Corrupt writes "I've admired Obama, but I never confused him with a genuine progressive leader. Today I don't admire him at all. His collapse on FISA is unforgivable. The only thing Obama has going for him this week is that McCain is matching him misstep for misstep."
Are there any American citizens (who understand what FISA is) that actually support it? I would think that even the right should be against it. If conservatives want to restore traditional American values, then surely preventing the government from using new technology to conduct widespread domestic spying is conducive to that goal.
With both congress and the president's approval rating hovering at below 20%, it is clear that the will of the people is not being represented. The only plausible explanation for FISA is that it is intended an means for the executive branch to seize an even greater imbalance of power, and/or to cover up widespread criminal activity that took place in the last eight years.
That's why we always vote for Lesser Evil, not the Greater Good.
I've admired Obama, but I never confused him with a genuine progressive leader. Today I don't admire him at all. His collapse on FISA is unforgivable. The only thing Obama has going for him this week is that McCain is matching him misstep for misstep
Well, now that Obama has the party nomination, he can't possibly manage to get anything done. Now he has to support all the things Hillery wanted done, while making sure that he seems Conservative enough to attract some of the republicans that don't like McCain. If Obama tries to be different, he risks alienating long-time democrat supporters, if he tries to be the same he risks alienating all the people who want to vote for him for change.
Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
If a higher office candidate has a "D" or an "R" next to their name, they aren't progressive.
That probably goes for any letter, but those two in particular.
FTFA: "Every time I wonder whether I can ultimately vote for Obama in November, given all of his political cave-ins, McCain does something new to make sure I have to."
Thanks for propping up the good ol' two-party system there with your thinking, ma'am. Seriously, there are other bloody candidates out there, and if you don't think you should vote for Obama or McCain, then vote for one of them! It really gets tiring listening to the thinking exhibited by most people, which locks us into the hellhole of a political party system we have.
Change starts with you, and all that.
"16MB (fuck off, MiB fascists)" - The Mighty Buzzard
The guy seriously fudged the bucket with me. I actually had some amount of faith in this dude.
This was the big test to see if he would collapse under the pressure of the telecoms. More money was offered so he decided to go with it.
I am very upset over this but I should not be surprised. He is just another politician. (But lesser of the two evils)
The greatest revenge in life is massive success.
Senator Obama: Because of the miserable failure that George W Bush has been, I have been placing the candidates for this presidential election under strict scrutiny. Until yesterday, I was proud to tell my friends that I supported Barack Obama for President of the United States. Now, I fear that my interests and your interests are not aligned and I can no longer lend you my support. Yesterday, while you did vote for the Dodd amendment, you failed to support a filibuster, and you failed to vote against the revised FISA bill that does for the telecom companies who have implemented surveillance against the American people what Gerald Ford did for Nixon. Being President of the United States means sometimes taking an unpopular stance on an issue despite the outcry of the public. It sometimes means thinking in the long term instead of the short, 24-hour sound-bite news cycle. What you have done today is embolden the elements of the government that tapped Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and handed them a fresh set of excuses to listen to the phone calls and Internet traffic of the American people. Maybe things work differently in Washington. Maybe the FBI, CIA, NSA, and the president have sworn to Representatives and Senators not to listen to their calls. Maybe the Republicans have sworn to the Democrats not to sabotage them like in the '70s during Watergate. Out in America, away from the halls of power, what protection does the citizen have against those who would gladly violate their expectation of privacy? Might I remind you that the president that suggested this bill also lied to start a war, approved the torture of innocent civilians, and believes himself to be above the law. What you did today was sell The People down the river for political capital. I hope you are proud of yourself. I am not proud of you. You are no different than any other politician, using the politics of fear to get what you want. The only sort of Hope you offer is False Hope - the worst kind because by the time it is identified as such, it is too late. A humble citizen, MasterOfMagic (I put my actual name, but I'm not going to post it here)
I was under the impression that Obama is not perfect but that he would always admit if he was wrong and quickly qork towards the right direction. I think this will be a big test of him in my eyes. If he never turns around on this issue it means he is clearly as stubborn as the rest. If he can admit he is wrong then hes better than someone who started out agreeing with me more.
unzip; strip; touch; finger; mount; fsck; more; yes; unmount; sleep
"Our war on terror"? Don't you mean "Your government's blatant war profiteering, uncalled for war, and eventual enslavement of the general populous through degraded civil rights?" It's not your war, it's their war.
Or, did you actually want to go out of your way to start shit in the middle east, earn your government millions (probably actually billions) as well as their companies', as well as give up your civil liberties to fight the OH SO INSURGENT terrorists in the homeland?
Yeah, didn't think so.
If you don't like the entirety of something, you shouldn't vote for it!
Why?
Eventually, someone will hold you responsible for the part(s) you didn't like, and all you can say is, "But I didn't like that part," to which they will respond, asking, "Then why did you vote for it?"
This is why legislators like Ron Paul vote against things: if they don't like the whole thing, they vote no, no matter how important any one part of the whole is.
Colin Dean Go a year without DRM
It's not just FISA, there's also the death penalty for child rapists (is that "progressive"?), pulling out of public financing, and even being inflammatory on abortion despite being pro-choice in the past.
I think I agree with the Huffington Post. Is this the guy everybody got excited about?
Four years ago I saw an interview with Feingold, the democrat from Wisconsin. I thought he would be the one running this election, and now I wish he were.
Come again?
Tool in a war on what?
You do realize that there is a greater chance in wining a war on chocolate than "terror"?
You know... all that stuff about one being an actual physical thing and other being an idea.
Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
Did you just say that if he screws you over, then says, oops I was wrong... it's ok? Put the crack pipe down! How is he going to fix this is the question, not whether he was wrong or not. wow.
Support NYCountryLawyer RIAA vs People
Long before the votes were cast, those weak amendments were destined for failure. Which makes Obama's voting for them an empty gesture.
The reason the details are not yet fully known is that the telecoms who did the wiretapping are not going to cooperate in an investigation. Giving them immunity removes the only leverage that Congress had in getting them to testify.
So it's very likely that it will be at least 50 years (and possibly never) before we actually come to terms with the scope of the wiretapping. And no one in the Bush administration will ever be held accountable for violating the law and the constitutional rights of private citizens.
I recognize that we're looking at a two man race, and all Obama needs to do is not lose. But on this issue (which is about the expanding power of the executive and has nothing to do with National Security) Obama could have made a clear, decisive stand and taken a position as a leader of the democratic party. Instead he chose to follow the herd, disappointing.
It breaks my pluginses, my precious!
While I despise them as a group there are a few I like. If you just have a fuzzy blanket hatred for them as a group, you're actually giving each one of them individually a pass- you basically have no opinion of them or their behavior. If your Congressman keeps voting for evil shit, it doesn't matter, because when the election comes you'll hate his opponent too.
Even after following your link to a conservative website I fail to see how what he said is so unreasonable. He is basically saying that we should be like the rest of the world and have our children learn multiple languages early on. Spanish would be fairly useful since there are many people in the US that speak Spanish.
This is my problem with conservative personalities these days. They try to take these things out of context to make it seem like what Obama says is horrible. But every time I look at the full transcript of what he says, he comes off extremely reasonable. This link didn't even hide the context. So really, what's the big deal?
Support a great indie game: http://www.abaddon360.com
The rest of those things don't bother me much at all. I don't expect to share that many viewpoints with anyone, to me those are all small potato personal value judgements that people can reasonably disagree about.
The FISA bill is what is really disappointing. It's amazing how overnight it's completely destroyed my opinion of Obama. When is a politician going to have the courage to stand up and point out the simple absurdity of shredding our own constitution, trampling human rights, and sparing no legislation to cover our own asses to fight a threat that is statistically insignificant? The terrorists must just be laughing in their caves right now. Are we such pussies in America that we can't rely on real intelligence and police work to fight terrorists?
This isn't a partisan issue at all, it's the absolute insanity of our times. Obama really sounded like he understood that, then he turns around does the exact opposite. It's not about flip-flopping per se, it's about pretending to know what the biggest, scariest, most obvious problem is in this country, then turning around and pandering to bamboozled middle america huddled in fear thanks to 7 years of fear-mongering by an incompetent who was just trying to muddle through a job that was way wayyy beyond him. If Obama had stuck to his guns (if he even understood the point of what he was saying), he could have used the bully pulpit to bring rationality back to America ala "The only thing we have to fear is fear itself." Unfortunately now his rhetoric has become hollow. I still think he may redeem himself as president, but his most powerful tool, his voice, is now castrated.
Man, you got more issues then you can even imagine.
You got a +5 for this?
I'm completely disillusioned with Obama right now but that notwithstanding I still don't think you deserved a +5, insightful for that comment. Admiring a politician means you have "issues"?
So I have "issues" if I admire Nelson Mandela?
I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
I'm voting for Obama. McCain is incredibly awful, and Obama overall looks pretty good - based on his past actions, and his public understanding of some of the solutions we need.
But I'm not that enthusiastic anymore. This FISA surrender is a terrible blow to his credibility in every way. On an essential issue about the Constitution, fighting Bush, keeping his word, leading, privacy, the rule of law. If Obama had done this one right, he'd have proved he can lead us out of the deep mess we're in. Instead, he looks like he's part of the problem - and certainly not part of the solution.
McCain, of course, is also completely in love with the new FISA that spits in the Constitution's eye. And McCain is salivating for so much more of Bush/Cheney's tyrannical powers. And he and his lobbyist advisors are even more clueless than the first round of corporate overlords under Bush/Cheney that they'll waste even more of America as they slice away for their cronies the power and money their offices will give them.
So McCain is unacceptable. I'm enthusiastic about him losing. And voting is not optional: it's an obligation to make a choice, some choice, after learning what the candidates are likely to do once elected. So the choice between McCain and Obama is clearly Obama, who must then get my vote. But I don't have to be happy about it. I don't have to send Obama money. I don't have to sign petitions demanding fair treatment by the media. I don't have to go to Obama rallies or other PR stunts.
If Obama's candidacy were to actually look like it might fail, and McCain might win, then I would send Obama money and do more legwork to get him elected. Because the choice is indeed that important. But I don't have to be happy about it. How can I remain inspired, hopeful, when Obama has raised my expectations, and then smashed them? I've got a sense of proportion, so I know FISA isn't the only issue (though it's important), and that McCain is worse on FISA and everything else. But there were a few hopeful months when Obama was doing FISA different, and now I'm back to the usual disgusted trip to the voting booth.
It's like taking out the trash, instead of going to the video store. Gotta do it, not going to get any dirtier than I must, won't be getting much laughs out of the trip, but I'm holding my nose.
--
make install -not war
It's like somebody lent the guy one of those self help books, but the title is, "How To Be A Dick", and he's turning it into his own personal Bible. Doesn't Obama understand that he gets a huge amount of his support from people who just didn't give a crap about politics before, and who will vanish like smoke if he turns into the same old thing with a pretty face painted on it?
I've calculated my velocity with such exquisite precision that I have no idea where I am.
Unfortunately, the "right" direction depends on one's point of view.
On this issue, both you and "Corrupt" have a point of view that his direction is "wrong" while others believe it is right.
The problem is that, regardless of what you think, you don't get to determine right and wrong for everyone.
There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
no, No, NO, this sneaking crap into bills garbage has got to stop. If they're trying to hand out Telco immunity under the guise of "maintaining terror fighting tools" then vote "no". Then when people complain put out a press release saying - "This is crap and (here is why). If someone puts out a bill that isn't laden with money-backed special interest filler - I'll vote for it." Sometimes it blows my mind to see / hear about the things that have been combined into one bill.
You are using English. Please learn the difference between loose and lose; they're, there, and their; your and you're.
So you are saying that companies that do illegal things at the request of the government should be "given a pass", rather than have to make a decision that might be inconvenient?
I would rather not have set the precedent that companies can have laws made just for them giving them immunity for crimes committed in the past.
If I have nothing to hide, don't search me
Even after following your link to a conservative website I fail to see how what he said is so unreasonable. He is basically saying that we should be like the rest of the world and have our children learn multiple languages early on. Spanish would be fairly useful since there are many people in the US that speak Spanish. This is my problem with conservative personalities these days. They try to take these things out of context to make it seem like what Obama says is horrible. But every time I look at the full transcript of what he says, he comes off extremely reasonable. This link didn't even hide the context. So really, what's the big deal?
The big deal is that their target audience will never bother to read the article, and they know it.
What gave you that impression in the first place, because he said so? All he's ever done is spout platitudes tailored to his audience. He preached hope and change and far left ideology to win the primaries, now he's taken a hard right turn to try and win the general election. He's Bill Clinton with far less experience, far less gravitas, and a better tan.
The problem is that Obama depicts himself as different from all other politicians, that he claimed he would support a filibuster over telecom immunity, and that he voted to cut off filibuster.
He flat out reneged on an important promise, apparently because he wanted to "move to the center", "accept the compromise (sic)", and "appear tough on terrorism".
All he really did was show that he is just another ethically challenged politician.
Infuriate left and right
And if that is truly the case, then it shows Obama's true colors. This bill does not introduce a vital new tool or method for law enforcement to track down the "bad guys." It only removes restrictions on existing methods, and so now we have even fewer protections from our government. If this is the goal Obama really sought, then he is not promoting the sort of "change" that I am really interested in. This is the compromise: Obama wants to loosen restrictions on how investigations will be performed, so he is willing to allow telecom companies to be immune from prosecution for their role in assisting the government in ignoring restrictions on how investigations may be performed.
Then my friends wonder why I am voting third party.
Palm trees and 8
What COULD he do? As a Senator, he could only do 3 things;
Vote for amendments eliminating the immunity provision (He did)
Vote against the bill, denying law enforcements precious tools (He didn't)
Vote FOR the bill and bide his time (He did)
Make no mistake, Obama has clearly stated he is against granting the telecoms immunity; there's simply nothing yuo can do when OTHER blue dog democrats with cushy incumbent seats wantto retain their fat lobbyist paychecks and vote with their wallets. rather than their constituent's values, defeating perfectly logical amendments.
I never spellcheck and I freely admit it. Save your karma for more worthwhile "lol erorrs" replies
FISA has worked fine for 22 years
really? how the hell do YOU know? if you knew, you would be gagged and prevented from posting real info about it.
this is the age of the 'gag order'...
secret police and secret non-public courts. checks and balances? nah, its such a QUAINT old concept.
seriously, you and I will never know if this FISA stuff really did any good or not. my guess is that it was NEVER any good but just a power grab.
its getting closer and closer to the time when we need to take to the streets with pitchforks....
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"It is now safe to switch off your computer."
Frankly, I don't really don't care that much that the telecoms get off the hook in this instance. Yes, it's a bad precedent, but it's far from the biggest problem here. It's part of a pattern that is far more worrying.
The biggest problem is that the FISA amendments allow the government to destroy surveillance records, or not to keep them in the first place. What possible legitimate purpose could that serve? The telecom thing isn't there to protect the telecoms, it's there to make it impossible for private individuals to determine the scope of the government's intrusion via discovery. Likewise, the amendment prevents states from investigating crimes committed against their citizens.
Clearly, the biggest practical effect of these amendments is to allow the executive branch to engage in criminal activities and obstruct any effort, private or public, to determine the extent of those crimes.
This is not a "liberal" issue. Concealing and destroying evidence shows this is not an argument about the extent to which the President is bound by one law or another, but whether he can exceed his constitutional powers with impunity and then escape accountability. This transcends liberal/conservative divide over the President's "inherent powers", because whatever you think the scope of the President's powers should be, this allows him to exceed that scope.
Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
What would have been the point of suing the telecom companies?
The point was to find out exactly what the hell happened through the discovery process. This wasn't some thinly veiled attempt to get money out of Verizon and AT&T. This was an attempt to find out what the extent of this illegal wiretapping program was and to hold those who violated the law (within the administration and within Verizon/AT&T) accountable.
The lawyers would have made most of the money anyway
Yes, those money-grubbing lawyers at the EFF and ACLU only took this on so they could make legal fees....
What if it comes out the "wrong" way? What if the courts decide the President has that authority?
Yes, if only Dred Scott had been content to remain a slave and hadn't sued to change it... then we wouldn't have had the horrible Dred Scott decision on the books.
I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
There are some admirable politicians out there. The fact that you are unwilling to look at their individual behavior, and simply tar them all with the same brush, marks you as intellectually lazy and fundamentally dishonest.
- None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
Senator Obama:
When I first heard you speak, I was moved, literally. Very few people who speak give me chills, and you were one of them. Later, I was excited to attend your speech at Joe Luis Arena when you came to Detroit--not only excited to hear you speak in person, but excited to be a part of something big and meaningful. Though I am still young and have only been following politics for the past eight awful years, I felt honored to be able to finally support a politician who seemed different from any other.
I'm now several months removed from the first time I heard you speak and a few weeks past the night I attended your speech in Detroit. I'm writing to you five days after Independence Day, and only a few hours after you voted for the FISA Amendment Act. Simply put, I feel cheated, and I know I'm only one of tens of thousands of supporters who feel the same way. It's one thing for the majority of the Senate to pass this legislation, it's another for someone who you thought was different to vote for it. That's the biggest slap in the face.
In light of your vote, I'm no longer excited about your stake for presidency. I thought that we might be on a path to something new, something better. But your vote tells a different story, and that's not change that I can believe in. It's simply more of the same.
Thank you for your time.
The For Sale and the Sold.
Vote against the bill, denying law enforcements precious tools (He didn't)
Why not vote against it?
Why not punish the people who draft bills that are too broad in scope or have insane riders on them and let them know that if they want laws passed they should learn to be concise? Or how about actually standing up for their constituents?
What the hell is wrong with the government working for the people it's supposed to represent for a freaking change?
Obama has clearly stated he is against granting the telecoms immunity; there's simply nothing yuo can do when OTHER blue dog democrats with cushy incumbent seats wantto retain their fat lobbyist paychecks and vote with their wallets.
WRONG. Yes there is. How about voting your conscience rather than rolling over and taking it up the tailpipe? This is supposed to be a leadership value?
Please don't think I'm a Republican when I type this, but if this is Obama's idea of "Change" - well, it looks like the same old same old to me.
Weaselmancer
rediculous.
Kind of like voting for a war ... and then opposing it.
The time for thoughtful consideration is BEFORE the damage is done.
Words are cheap.
"After consulting with the generals..."
Except for ending slavery, the Nazis, communism, & securing American independence, war has never solved anything.
how are you going to lead the country?
Leaders do NOT compromise their core values.
Anything that they DO compromise on is NOT a core value for them.
Obama "compromised" on the 4th Amendment, his previous statements and telecom immunity with that vote.
Why? Did he suddenly start believing the opposite of what he believed before?
No, he did it because he thought that preemptive capitulation would make him look "strong".
He cravenly caved to a lame duck President.
I sent this to Obama last night...absolutely disgusted.
Your message says change yet your vote on the FISA bill says more of the same corruption. You could have rallied democrats to not let the bill through with the retroactive immunity, yet you have actively helped Mr. Bush and his cronies cover up their illegal activities. Anybody else would have gone to jail for what these criminals have done yet apparently all men are not created equal in the eyes of Barack Obama. You have actively betrayed the privacy and trust of the American people.
So what am I really supposed to believe you were trying to accomplish by voting this way? Do you really believe that these companies and the administration are above the law and deserve to be allowed to do whatever they want? Or are you just doing whatever you think will get you the most votes in the election which ironically happens to be a polar opposite from your stated message (at least the one on the front page of your website). Either and both of these reasons are enough for you to have lost my vote. I am not sure what is worse, the hypocrisy of Mr. Bush stressing the importance of the FISA bill for national security and then vetoing anything that doesn't cover himself and his cronies, or your recent complete betrayal.
Before today, I absolutely endorsed and loved your message of change. I thought finally, we will have a president who might actually do something about global warming. What an amazing thing it would have been to have a president who actually wanted to fix the country. It is sad that once again this remains only a dream.
"To be clear: Barack will support a filibuster of any bill that includes retroactive immunity for telecommunications companies." -Obama spokesman Bill Burton, oct 07
I was under the impression that Obama is not perfect but that he would always admit if he was wrong and quickly qork towards the right direction. I think this will be a big test of him in my eyes. If he never turns around on this issue it means he is clearly as stubborn as the rest. If he can admit he is wrong then hes better than someone who started out agreeing with me more.
How do you know that they won't change their views back once elected?
That's the dilemma that politicians face. If they change their views, they are "flip-floppers". If they don't, they are stubborn.
Ignore for a second how you feel about any particular politician and consider this example. Obama is being hammered for changing his views. Bush is hammered for NOT changing his views. They are damned if the do and damned if they don't.
There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
"Nothing would ever get done if everyone in Congress refused to vote for anything that contained a provision that they didn't agree with."
That would be an ideal country to live in. The greatest politicians in history have been the ones that did not do anything. No bad ideas made reality, no debts paid back to campaign financiers, no added restrictions on individual rights. It's the ones that think they need to change the world - acting on their definition of "the Greater Good" - that you must worry about.
Note: This is not flamebait. It is the truth.
Please go look at
http://my.barackobama.com/
It's Obama's "Snopes".
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Obama is a liberal
Obama will raise taxes on those making $225k & up (and I think $90k & Up)
That means a lot of powerful wealthy people are going to be doing a lot of despicable things to try and keep him from being elected. For them the Bush years have been great. The top 1% has gotten tax cuts so great that the top 5% shows tax cuts even tho taxes are up on the top 2-5%.
There are a lot of VALID reasons to oppose Obama because he IS a liberal. Or you can oppose him because he is socially liberal.
McCain is a conservative. I would have supported him but I saw a very clear moment in 2005 when he said, "I want to be president and I'm going to play ball with the wealthy and the corporations and the military industrial complex". He flipped on several key issues at that point and became Bush-3. I don't want to wait around 2-3 years until he reverts to being the McCain that I supported while the country goes deeper into debt and gets into a couple more pointless wars.
There are a lot of VALID reasons to oppose Obama because he IS a neo-con republican now. Or you can oppose him because is socially conservative.
Both candidates are going to be screwed as first term presidents by a vicious bear market akin to 1968-1980.
But do the decency to go to each man's site and read up on them. Clinton & Their ilk will create a lot of lies about McCain. Whisper campaigns. Play up how he divorced his first wife. Etc. Karl Rove and his ilk will create a lot of lies about Obama. Play up "Hussein". Plant whisper campaigns that he is a muslim. Etc.
If you really are a christian, shouldn't you be moral and ethical and really find out the truth about Obama rather than listening to gossip and lies? This is a man tha said he got down on his knees and accepted Jesus Christ when he was doing community work almost 30 years ago. He's been going to christian churches for all that time. And suddenly he's islamic? Bullshit.
I don't believe my self but I think it is more the dogma of christianity than the good works. Some of the dogma is silly but the basic meme is kind and moral.
Anyway... CHECK THE FACTS on BOTH men. Both are decent intelligent men. I'm going to vote Obama because he inspires me. He makes me believe in America as the shining beacon on the hill- that country where anyone can be president. The country that is tough as nails and a scrappy fighter but basically decent, honest, and fair.
I think I see how they felt about Kennedy. I sure hope Obama is elected and doesn't screw it all up with some stupid tragic flaw.
She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
Surely, I'm in the minority (and dammit, quit calling me Shirley), but for me, as a substantially liberal Republican, this move has solidified my vote for Obama. This, plus his reconsideration of a hasty Iraq withdraw shows me that he is willing and able to think things through and change his mind instead of waltzing the party line.
He voted FOR the bill. Nevermind he said that he would never vote for a bill that granted immunity. Nevermind that this bill is the last chance at exposing Bush's misdoings regarding the wiretapping scandal. The key is that it undermines individual protections; and he voted for it in favor of executive branch power.
He did NOT need to vote for the bill. The idea that law enforcement is denied 'precious' tools has been debunked time and again. All it denies is oversight - which is a terrible, terrible idea. The original FISA bill allowed for wiretaps with warrants, warrants that are easy to get, even after the fact. Instead, he has opted for blind trust in the executive branch.
There is always something you can do; he didn't need to vote for the bill. It would have been an easy thing to do - the bill still would have gone through. Make no bones about it; he's shifting to the middle in hopes of picking up swing voters who swallow the purple punch and believe the current Administration's rhetoric about how this is 'vital' to national security, or we're all DOOMED. It's overblown propaganda, and people need to recognize that.
Finally, let me note that he's not 'biding his time'. There is nothing he can do now; the bill has to be repealed by Congress or the Supreme Court. It's not like once he's President he can wave a magic wand and make the bad thing go away. More to the point, even if he could, voting for the bill does nothing to increase his ability to do so. It's entirely gutless move.
[Ego]out
Ah, I see, so it's all those other Democrat's faults. Obama is just selling out on liberty as a reasonable measure.
The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
And that's the reason the Republican Media Machine put him as the frontrunner. After 8 years of hell, a Republican president still seems like a viable option.
Always do right. This will gratify some people and astonish the rest. -- Mark Twain
Senator Obama,
Today you voted to destroy the Constitution. You betrayed millions of supporters like myself when you voted away the 4th Amendment today. No amount of spin on your part is going to change the fact that you and your fellow Congressmen stabbed every American in the back today. You and the rest of your compatriots in the Senate and House have lost all claims to legitimacy. You have betrayed your oath of office, the Constitution and the People.
I cannot begin to express how violated, molested and utterly betrayed I feel by what you have done. I feel duped, suckered, hoodwinked and bamboozled. I feel like I have been robbed, raped and left bleeding in a dark alley.
Goodbye, Senator. This is a deal breaker. I will not be voting in November. You have destroyed what little hope I had left for my country. I now know without doubt that absolutely nobody in my government can be trusted. You and all your fellow traitors inside the beltway can go to hell. There is no excuse for what you have done and no possible explanation or apology will right this wrong.
In closing, Senator, I leave you with a reminder and fair warning from our founders.
I feel no shame for having taken a chance that you might be different, Senator. However, knowing now that you have taken ranks with the most vile among us, to remain in your camp would bring enduring shame and dishonor upon my soul.
Goodbye and God Save the People!
Power does not corrupt - power attracts the corrupt.
Claiming some morally superior position doesn't mean a damn
thing if you aren't willing to actually act on it.
Obama should have been willing to start the fillibuster himself.
He's supposed to be a leader rather than a follower. This is
true of him just in his role of Senator. Nevermind asking to
be President.
At the very least he should have voted no on the bill and made
a nice speech on CSPAN.
He was given an opportunity to be counted amongst those that are
as he describe himself "not merely a part of the status quo" and
he failed.
Now his "new and progressive and different" rhetoric has been completely "busted".
A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
He's not going to be the leader of the people. He's going to be the executive authority of the Union. He's going to lead the troops. But he has no direct authority over the law-abiding citizens of the country.
"If I were to ask you a hypothetical question, what would you like it to be about?"
I'm curious to know how you could believe that a man going back on his word -- breaking an agreement -- is somehow justifiable in anybody's moral code.
"If I were to ask you a hypothetical question, what would you like it to be about?"
He's not just a senator anymore -- he's a de facto party leader, and gets as much press as he wants. People will pour over his every word. He could and should have used this opportunity to take a stand against widespread civil rights violations. Most democrats would have followed him, too -- nobody's gonna retract their endorsements at this point.
Instead he made a nominal fuss, then caved to the big money. Typical.
(Precious tools? Please...)
Presidential candidates don't need your help, it's the local ones. They're the ones who grow up to be presidential candidates. If you get good ones in office locally, you not only benefit immediately, but you have a much better chance of getting 'bigger' candidates that have similar beliefs and concerns.
...I am also very upset about his unwillingness to fight telecom
immunity. This is a serious issue for me. I, and many of my friends
and family are tired of being spied upon and considered seditious in
the overreaching "War on Terror"; this unwillingness essentially
rewards the companies that were "just following orders", and makes
Barack seem weak in the 'War on the Constitution'.
That said, I'm a locally active DFL'er - not because I agree with everything that the DFL stands for, but so I can try and make changes to the DFL at the low level, like Instant Runoff Voting, and other platforms that will hopefully trickle up. (Incidentally making other parties more viable)
An excerpt from my letter to Obama (sent several weeks before this vote):
My wife and I are delegates for the first district in MN. We got involved for the first time because we believed that Barack would kick corporate interests out of Washington, that he would help restore the Constitution, and that we would have someone in office who not only held similar beliefs, but would not compromise them. I've combated many false and slanderous emails, reached out to many independent voters who were 'on the fence', and was the first in my town to sport a Obama sign in my yard, sticker on my car, and button on my guitar strap - but I'm sad to say that I'm becoming disillusioned.
I need Barack to stop compromising. I need him to hold the current (and future) administration accountable, I need him to return government to the people, rather than corporate interests. I need him to keep to the ideals which made me want to actively support a candidate for the first time in 20 years. I will do my best to get him elected, but only if I can believe in him.
The response I got was a plea for money. Thanks, but I'll spend my dollars on local candidates in MN, who I can trust not to tell me one thing, and do another.
Obama has clearly stated he is against granting the telecoms immunity
He voted for the bill, ergo he favors telecom immunity. Case closed.
As someone once said, you can judge a man more accurately by his actions than his words.
God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
Your ideals are noble but your efforts misguided. Rome wasn't built in one day and the US political system will not change overnight simply because Obama (or ANY politician) suddently decides to rage against the machine. Once elected, Obama can enact REAL change and retroactively remove the immunity if it is even worth it.
I personally don't believe single-issue voters have ever, or WILL ever decide an election and therefore Obama has made a shrewd political move insuring his electability. The Republican propaganda machine THRIVES on perceived fears of terrorism; giving them prime ammunition like "Obama voted against finding terrists!",while the bill is GUARANTEED TO PASS ANYWAY, achieves nothing.
Idealist never achieve anything; the only vote that has lasting effect is from the rooftop. The restis all decided by the leaders-that-be, and solely themselves.
I never spellcheck and I freely admit it. Save your karma for more worthwhile "lol erorrs" replies
Yes. People fail consider a possibility that a politician could be thinking and that the issue is a bit more complex then "i vote for this because i support everything it is about". Just think about how many times at work you have to say things like "well it's not that easy to do it that way..." when someone who does not know what's going on tells you you're doing something wrong. A lot of politicians are crooks and idiots but not all of them.
There's only one party...The RepublicCrats, They pretend to disagree on minor distractions, but nobody wants real change. After all, a politicians first job is to get reelected. The current system put them in power, and they are not about to change it.
I used to say "If you want real change, vote for Chuck Baldwin with the Constitution party." Then the black box voting machines stopped counting our votes.
Now I say "If you want real change, learn to shoot."
Andy
Or he could filibuster. Just the threat of a filibuster from the Democratic nominee should have been enough to kill the bill in the first place.
He certainly won't be getting my vote. Neither will McCain, though. I refuse to pick between the lesser of two evils. That's why I'm voting Cthulu.
The exclusivity provision makes it clear to any president or telecommunications company that no law supersedes the authority of the FISA court.
FISA's authority here was already exclusive, as was recently reiterated in a Federal court by a Bush Sr. appointed judge. Obama voted for a meaningless provision. "I'll help you get away with doing something illegal this time, if you'll let me make it double-illegal for next time!" is not a compromise, it is idiocy. The only remaining question is whether Obama was dumb enough to believe this argument himself or just dishonest enough to try to trick his supporters into believing it.
My sympathies for those of you voting in swing states. Helping choose between John "I'd like to shred the Fourth Amendment" McCain and Barack "I'll shred the Fourth Amendment, but I'll feel sad about it" Obama is probably still important, but it can't be very fun.
Nothing would ever get done if everyone in Congress refused to vote for anything that contained a provision that they didn't agree with.
You say that like it's a bad thing. If Congress can't get around to passing any laws, they can't make our lives more complicated. Sounds like a winning plan to me.
God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
It does make me mad that Obama would support this legislation and it undermines the principles he should be standing for. I do vote democrat but it is bothering that they seem to be eroding away their own support base by support republican ideas rather than differentiating themselves and actually supporting a free democratic society not trying to turn it into a police state. Pelosis idea of censoring the net was also very dissappointing. Of course the republicans are worse, but it is upsetting because we need a party to oppose the agenda which seems to be aimed at turning us into a police state. I would still vote democrat just to help keep Mccain out of power which would be worse than obama. Obama has made committments on the net neutrality which mccain has not done. Voting for mccain, a third party or not voting will do far more damage than voting for Obama, that i am sure of, so I will vote for obama and democrats which on the whole are better than the republicans by far. To not do so would be suicidal, i cant stand the idea of 4 more years of neocon war faring, slash education and social well being, damage the environment, etc, etc.
Another thing is, if people are fed up with the two party duopoly, maybe its time to look at a porportional or preferential election system, like Instant runoff voting so you can rank your candidates in order of preference and dont end up throwing away your vote on candidates who cant win and allowing another Bush to get elected.
There is little doubt that obama is a lot better than mccain, even though he is not perfect. Mccain would be a total disaster at least there are some positive things about Obama. Voting for mccain would be suicide, and pretty much we can be assured with our first past the post dual party system it will be mccain or obama, obama is far better. Any liberal who votes for a third party is just going to help mccain win and we will end up in a far worse situation than with obama. So we need to look at who is overall best, just because obama isnt perfect we should not help get mccain elected which any liberal who goes third party or does not vote will do.
Instant runoff would give people the confidence to vote in a third party but have their vote fall back to the democrats if the third party cant win. It would actually cause third parties to become more prominent and encourage people to vote on principle rather than popularity. But we dont have that system yet so we do need to vote for obama so we end up with someone who is overall better than mccain. This goes for all the congressional races as well, where democrats need a lot of help to win and do have an overall better platform, although not perfect.
Actually Kucinich made it clear that he was saying the same thing you did - it was an Object, Flying, Unidentified. He was then asked "What do you think it was?" and replied "I have no idea."
However, he has an in-law who's a fairly successful (in the sense of 'profit-making') astrologer, and she whomped it up horribly, going on about how he felt a great sense of peace and all the usual woo-woo.
Guess which version the media keeps harping on?
Far left ideology? Man you Americans have some strange ideas about what left-wing ideology means. "hard left" where I live would mean slashing military expenditure to perhaps 5% of the current levels, instituting proper free healthcare everywhere, proper free education everywhere,.. actually HARD left would mean making private education illegal. Try googling "socialist workers party" for some hints at what "hard left" really means.
Nelson Mandela blew up government buildings under direction of the Soviet-backed African National Congress. Whether he did it for the right reason or not, is not the point. The point is that he used violence to affect political outcome. That makes him a terrorist.
Obama is not, as far as I can tell, a terrorist. He's just a politician - and that means saying and doing whatever is convenient at the time. It's the same now as it always was.
History has provided, from time to time, true statesmen - but they are are far and few between - and their status is usually guaranteed or denied to to political considerations at the time.
David Ben Gurion was a terrorist who blew up buildings and assassinated British soldiers and officers, yet he's the hero of Israeli independence. Michael Collins was the same for Ireland, and you have your Nelson Mandela.
Timothy McVeigh was a terrorist who blew up a government building hoping to start a revolution. Instead of an honourary doctorate and a country, he got executed. Everyone likes to admire a winner; only "fanatics" and "extremists" admire losers who use the same tactics.
Either way, trying to compare Obama to Nelson Mandela has got to be some sort of corollary to Godwin.
But you had to expect Obama to go towards the middle. It's not popular for people who want "liberal" things done, but he can't just keep preaching to the choir. I hate his stance on this. It aggravates me, but I know he's still trying to do good things. The reason "other" candidates are so cool is because they know they have no shot of winning. Look at the crazy and awesome things people like Ron Paul, Steve Forbes, Al Sharpton, and even Ross Perot were able to say! Of COURSE you can say those things and say how you really feel because only a small percentage will agree with you [when you consider the ENTIRE POPULATION of the United States]. My vote's going to be cast for Obama this year, reluctantly, but I know it's better used on him than a vote that will not go to him and give McCain an edge. McCain of 2000 = decent choice. McCain of '08 = the continued slide of America into the wastebin.
You've never seen something you couldn't identify? Whatever.
Of course I have.
The difference is I just didn't assume that just because I didn't know what it was that it must be intelligent life from another planet.
I have no idea what Kusinich saw, or thought he saw, but I'm pretty damn sure that he isn't one of countless people who've all seen real UFOs but have all been so spectacularly unlucky as to come away with no evidence.
That being said it's a mostly harmless belief, but it is almost certainly an unsound belief and its very existence suggests his decision making process isn't quite sound.
I used to be willing to believe that religion was also a mostly harmless belief, then I started to see how that belief caused some people to make very unsound decisions. Just look at Bush to see how bad that unsound basis can be in practice.
I don't know enough about Kusinich to know if he's one of "the best of the worst", but I consider the belief in UFOs to indicate a real vulnerability in his decision making process.
I stole this Sig
Why not vote against it?
Because the bill passed, while not a good bill, is STILL better than the present law. Obama, and others, tried to strip the immunity. It didn't work. So given the choice between maintaining the status quo (worse) or accepting that the telecom companies have bought out a filibuster-proof majority in the Senate, Obama voted for the bill so AT LEAST executive power is restrained a bit more.
Obama chose 'something' over 'nothing'.
The immunity is also not absolute, and if/when Obama is President, hopefully the issue can be revisited when a Bush veto doesn't have to be overcome (which is a mere 6 months from now).
paintball
Obama favoured the common ownership of the means of production, distribution and exchange? Wholesale nationalisation of all industries? A centrally planned economy?
Or did he just favour adding a few half-arsed social safeguards to make corporate capitalism slightly more bearable for the workers?
Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
It's completely justifiable in mine, but then I guess I'm strange in that I value personal integrity over immature schoolyard codes of conduct. I would much rather break an agreement than do something I decided was wrong.
I don't care if I wrote a contract, shared a beer, or pinky swore with my best friend to always help them. If they ask me to help them bury a body or rob a bank, they're on their own. I don't care that I gave them my word. I'm going to do what is right. Now, that might annoy people who need promises to make themselves feel better. I guess they can just deal. I'd rather have someone I can count on to do the right thing rather than someone who will do whatever I make them promise to do.
I'm deeply troubled by the number of people who have said they would prefer a president who refused to change his mind even when he found out he was wrong to a president who was willing to change his mind. That's great. They admire the one who's wrong and refuses to fix it. But at least you can count on him/her to keep on being wrong and keep refusing to fix it.
What is wrong with FISA that the current bill fixes?
This bill changes nothing except now what the Bush administration did illegally, it can now do legally. And the fact that they were doing it illegally before is also, actually, legal.
The only thing this does is confirm that the CIA/NSA can do whatever they want regardless of the law and if they get caught, Congress will bail them out.
It breaks my pluginses, my precious!
This is just ONE of MANY examples proving that Obama is a total stuffed shirt who only says the right things, and almost never does them.
If he was a REAL candidate of hope and change, who actually gave even a passing nod to the constitution, or even any of the tenets set forth by Franklin, Jefferson, and the other geniuses who set up our system, he would not be a "realistic" candidate, and he certainly wouldn't get so much air time on corporate TV.
All you Obama fans had a real guy representing the stuff you really wanted. His name was Kucinich, and his wife is totally hot.
Oh, and he's the one in congress delivering impeachment papers day after day, too.....
But what he doesn't have is CNN, FOX, ABC, NBC, CBS, MSN, and Rolling Stone completely sucking his cock. There's a reason for that, too. He's the real deal, unlike stuffed shirt Obama, who talks the talk and then sells the constitution out for corporate and political power every time. Just like the FISA thing.
You people claiming it's a simple mistake that he will work to correct are idiots. The FISA thing is an OBVIOUS choice, actually talked about DIRECTLY in the fourth amendment.
You people claiming Republican's are far worse are also idiots. They are exactly the same. They just don't even SAY the right things. Well, they say the right things for old people and people who talk to invisible men in the sky, but then they vote pro corporate and pro fascist just like the Democrats. There is NO difference. The party lines are both the same: The bottom line for Viacomm, AOL/Time Warner, Bertelsmann, News Corp, and Disney.
I hold very few opinions. I hold information based on observation and fact. If you wish to disagree, please use facts.
You have the right to your opinion and considering what happened I can't say that I blame you for seeing him this way but consider this. He KNEW 20,000+ supporters HATED the idea of him voting yes on this. Additionally those supporters are his strong base that have been a hallmark of his campaign compared to, not just to other candidates this year, but in the past several elections. He changed his mind (flip-floping that McCain is all ready calling him out on) on an issue that his core wanted him to keep. If he was looking for votes with this move any idiot could tell you it was a bad plan. People are clamming he is pulling this because he is "just as bad as Bush/McCain". If that was true he would not have worked so hard to get the immunity in out of there in the first place. So logically I can't see any reason for him to have done this other then he thought it was the best course of action for us. If he is right or not is different story.
Once elected, Obama can enact REAL change and retroactively remove the immunity if it is even worth it.
Wow, it's as if the Republicans' fantasies about unlimited executive power and the Democrats' fantasies about Obama's goodness had a baby. A baby with fetal alcohol syndrome, who will never even be able to comprehend the SchoolHouse Rock version of "how a bill becomes a law"...
therefore Obama has made a shrewd political move insuring his electability.
Absolutely. He was against telecom immunity before he voted for it. There's no way the Republicans will ever be able to use that against him. He's nearly as electable as John Kerry, now!
The Republican propaganda machine THRIVES on perceived fears of terrorism; giving them prime ammunition like "Obama voted against finding terrists!"
That could have been awful. Instead they're now stuck with second-rate ammunition like "Obama voted against the Protect America Act for finding terrists, but caved after we courageous Republicans showed him who was boss!"
Idealist never achieve anything
The Bill of Rights looks pretty idealistic. Just because it'll be completely dismantled in the end doesn't mean it wasn't a very good achievement for a very long time.
``It's not like the requirements to get a FISA warrant (someone with a pulse to stand in front of a secret court and say "gimme" at some point not necessarily before you started spying) were exactly onerous.''
And that's the problem we have gotten into since 9/11. We _had_ laws and mechanisms in place to get the Bad Guys. Now, we have let governments grant themselves the power and the legitimacy to go after everyone.
Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
Basically it seems that to him it was more important to prevent future abuse then to vote for the power to punish past abuse.
Which would make sense, if this bill actually had measures to prevent future abuse. However, all this bill does is loosen restrictions and increase loopholes, making it more difficult to find and prosecute future abuse.
We all know what to do, but we don't know how to get re-elected once we have done it
Actually, the entire telecomm immunity thing isn't the point.
The point is, both the old FISA and the new FISA both allow warrantless searches. The old FISA provided for 72 hours of oversight-free tapping. The new FISA allows for many months of oversight-free tapping. They're both direct and obvious violations of the 4th amendment.
The position put forth by Obama is that "the government needs these tools"; the only correct action is to pursue article V (amendment) and see if they can get them; to violate the amendment because "they want to" is to act as if the constitution doesn't exist.
Why is this so important? Because if one part of the constitution can be ignored, so can any other part. Either we live in a constitutional republic, or we live in a nation ruled by 645 privileged nobles (535 reps, 100 senators, 9 judges and a president) who are not bound by anything other than what they agree upon.
I was brought up to understand that the nation I lived in was designed and authorized as a constitutional republic. How about you? Do you think the constitution should matter with regard to what the government can or cannot do, or are you more inclined to live in a nation ruled and guided exclusively by the fashions and opinions of 645 people? People, I should add, who were sworn into their jobs explicitly committing allegiance to, and swearing defense of, the constitution.
Is the retroactive pardoning of corporations for spying on the citizens distasteful? Yes, you bet it is. But it isn't the root of the problem, and as long as you, and people like you, keep harping on immunity, you're going to be blinded to what is actually wrong.
I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
Unless you are comparing it to the statutes of the "Protect America Act" this law is significantly worse, and does nothing to protect our safety. But it is worse than the PAA, because the statutes of that law expire, which puts us back to the fine FISA act which was passed in 1975. There is nothing that this new law adds to the '75 FISA act which protects our safety. What it does is allows the Executive Branch full power to break the law as it sees fit, with the only oversight coming from the Executive Branch, this law would make the Watergate affair legal.
Goddamnit, there were no fucking "precious tools" that would be denied without this bill. If you can't get the rubber stamp of the FISA court to approve your warrant, you've got less than nothing.
This is 100% about covering up the most massive, vicious, and egregious violation of the fourth amendment in the history of this nation. It has absolutely fucking nothing to do with surveilling terrorists.
I don't want McCain to win, but at the same time, someone has to have some principles somewhere along the line and I'm not giving up mine. I'm standing up for myself and not supporting Obama any longer.
I don't know about anyone else, but this sounds just as narrow-minded as any other single-issue voter. In a democracy, you will not always get everything you want. You need to weigh what's important, and what's possible, and try to get the best candidate you can. Sure, a multi-party system would help, but beyond that you sound no different than someone voting entirely on the issue of abortion, gay rights, or gun rights.
Sure, if you find FISA to be -the- issue, and it outweighs all other issues (environment, Iraq, foreign policy, etc), then go right ahead and throw your support elsewhere. Or if you think that his stance on FISA shows an endemic problem in his character, then go right ahead.
I think this is crap, too. And I'm really upset (in general, at first glance. I haven't read enough about it to have a full opinion) that Obama voted this way. But there other important aspects of his platform that I -do- agree with, and I won't let this one reasonably large flaw change that.
There's a THREE DAY grace period between when the spies can start spying, and they have to get their spying rubber-stamped by a Judge.
So, there is NO LAW ENFORCEMENT BENEFIT to this bill. It is purely there to provide cover for CRIMINALS.
Remember that: Anyone who voted for this bill is SOFT ON CRIME and HATES THE AMERICAN VALUES OF FREEDOM AND LIBERTY, EQUAL PROTECTION UNDER THE LAW, AND DUE PROCESS OF THE LAW.
Technology -- No Place For Wimps! Grateful Dead and Jerry Garcia Chatroom -- http://www.wemissjerry.org
So logically I can't see any reason for him to have done this other then he thought it was the best course of action for us. If he is right or not is different story.
Most politicians think that they're taking the best course of action for us. Bush thinks so. Clinton thought so. Bush's daddy thought so, Reagan thought so, and so on down the line. I really don't give a crap about this, because they all have it. You can bet your ass that McCain will do what he thinks is best for us, and Obama will do what he thinks is best for us.
I don't want a President who will do what he thinks is best for the country. I want a President who will do what I think is right.
If you mod me Overrated, you are admitting that you have no penis.
You have part of it right,in that it's about perception. The problem Obama has is the perception that he is turning into a giant waffling black Hillary. The reason everyone hated Hillary was she would say whatever you wanted to hear,while her actions went where the money was. Frankly I wouldn't be surprised if Obama keeps up this waffling crap that we'll have President McSame and another 8 years in Iraq.
And for the above poster who complained about someone voting 3rd party? If someone with a little charisma would run 3rd party,Like Jessie Ventura or Ron Paul,then we might actually get some decent competition. But as long as we have dems VS repubs you're going to get "rich corporate ass kisser" A or B. I am personally proud that my vote helped elect some green party candidates in my home state. Now we just need someone better than Bob Barr to run as a 3rd party candidate.. But as always this is my 02c,YMMV
ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
I agree. I used to vote for the "lesser of two evils", and I kept getting evil. I've had it, and from now on I'm voting for someone I think will be a good President, even if there's zero chance he'll be elected. That zero chance isn't because of me, it's because of all the other morons in this country that buy into the two-party system and the "wasted vote" myth. If a crappy President gets elected, the only people to blame are the people who voted for him.
If the country goes down the tubes, don't blame me. Blame the people who voted for crappy politicians (which is probably a majority of the voting population). Those of us who were brave enough to vote for non-mainstream candidates, people we actually believe in instead of "the lesser of two evils", will be blameless.
Let's be clear about this. The Immunity was added this way because the administration says that while the Law Enforcement Tools were important, the immunity was more important. They were willing to turn down the law enforcement tools, to get the immunity.
I agree - it *is* more important to deny the principle that when the President orders you to break the law, you are allowed to break the law, than it is to stop another terrorist attack.
Let's make this clear - I lost friends in the Pentagon *and* the World Trade Center, and I would *rather* get hit by Al-Qaeda, *again*, than to have established that the President can order you to break the law.
Frankly, I consider this immunity an another in a series of absolute wrongs foisted on our country by cowards and traitors.
Pug
An Invisible Entity of Vast Power whose existence must be taken on faith alone: Liberal Media
Once elected, Obama can enact REAL change and retroactively remove the immunity if it is even worth it.
Sure, just like a Democrat controlled Congress was going to end the war, stand up to Bush, etc. That's the problem with the philosophy of doing all the safe things to gain power. Once you gain it, you still play it safe (or safer) to retain it. It becomes habit forming. It is Karma whoring writ large.
The Republican propaganda machine THRIVES on perceived fears of terrorism; giving them prime ammunition like "Obama voted against finding terrists!",while the bill is GUARANTEED TO PASS ANYWAY, achieves nothing.
It achieves the goal of showing that he is willing to lead. It gives him the opportunity to use those vaunted powers of persuasive speech everyone claims he has. It gives him the opportunity to show he can persuade the people rather than a bare majority of the congress on an issue. Persuasive argumentation versus back alley deals. How novel would that be?
Leave the gun, take the cannolis.
Welcome to the world of politics. As much as I like Obama, one must never forget he is still a politician.
It just took the flag pin and now this for more people to get it. Unlike Hillary, Barack waited until after the primaries to start making the huge mistakes.
The immunity only covers CIVIL liability, criminal liability is still on the table, but with the 'leaders' we have, I cant see anyone bringing criminal charges against the TELCO and Bush et al unless the next president makes it an issue. (which they should)
So chin up, Obama isn't perfect, but aside from a revolution to replace the government, he will be better than what we could get with McCain or what we have now with the moron from Connecticut via Texass.
We didn't lose our rights overnight, and it will take time and effort to regain them. That is if people start worrying more about the future of America and less about gas prices, American Idol, and gay marriage.
Well after reading everyones' comments, I can now conclude that Obama just made the biggest mistake of his campaign to date. All of his other controversies just led me to roll my eyes and say the press is taking fluff too seriously. But apparently, a lot of you actually thought that Obama was the real deal, representing the little guy, instead of the status quo. I've read comment after comment here by people who've been shocked back into apathy.
You can bet that the media won't report this as much of a misstep. No, they'll probably conclude that it was good for him to do. But this is the first time I've seen his base start to wobble in any real way. Even more so than with Jeremiah Wright. I had always assumed that he had it locked up, but now I wonder if McCain might not have a shot after-all.
Obama could have easily stuck to his guns and further energized his base. Republicans wouldn't have been any more likely to turn out for McCain if Obama had voted against it. All he needs to do is hold onto his base and the election is easily his. McCain will never be able to turn out his base in significant numbers unless Obama chose Hillary as his running mate or we get another 9/11 style event. But with a steady enough build-up, it only takes a few stumbles by Obama for McCain to get within striking distance.
Either way, we're screwed. The next president will take all of the totalitarian powers that Bush had and expand upon them, without regard for the next guy who'll inherit those powers. The congress will continue to rubber-stamp it all and our standard of living will continue to decline. There's no turning back now. There is only starting over.