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Obama Sides With Bush In Spy Case

palegray.net is one of many who writes "President Obama has publicly sided with the Bush administration on the question of whether the President should be allowed to establish warrantless wiretapping programs designed to monitor US citizens. The President has asked a federal judge to stay a ruling that would allow key evidence into the domestic spying case against the government. 'Thursday's filing by the Obama administration marked the first time it officially lodged a court document in the lawsuit asking the courts to rule on the constitutionality of the Bush administration's warrantless-eavesdropping program.'" jamie points out that Obama's views and opinions were made clear through his Senate vote and numerous public statements, but many others see this as a disappointing start to an administration promising transparency and openness.

65 of 906 comments (clear)

  1. So much for not sacrificing ideals for safety. by Kludge · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So much for not sacrificing ideals for safety.

    Asshole.

    1. Re:So much for not sacrificing ideals for safety. by bigstrat2003 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Realistically, though, this isn't a change in what we know (or should have known, for those who didn't know this). All Obama has accomplished is shown any supporters who were still blind enough to believe him (after his Senate vote, no less) that he really doesn't support our rights like he claimed he did. His only possible excuse for his actions, that it might sabotage his campaign, has been removed, but his actions have not changed. Surprise, surprise.

      --
      "16MB (fuck off, MiB fascists)" - The Mighty Buzzard
    2. Re:So much for not sacrificing ideals for safety. by gnick · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The cracks are showing.

      It will come as a shock to some that, even though Obama has taken office, a lot of the nation is overcast today. We still have to pay to go to the doctor. Dog poo does not yet smell like peppermint. And I've yet to get a raise or better offer this week.

      I like the guy and, although some of his plans make me nervous (I'm a pretty staunch fiscal conservative), I'm optimistic that he'll do a good job. But it is kind of satisfying to see him reveal that he's not quite the guy that so many people see up on that pedestal.

      --
      He's getting rather old, but he's a good mouse.
    3. Re:So much for not sacrificing ideals for safety. by fyngyrz · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The US has devolved into a place where safety trumps constitutional authorization, judicial honesty, liberty, and honor.

      The government might as well change the national motto to "Safety at Any Cost."

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    4. Re:So much for not sacrificing ideals for safety. by hobbit · · Score: 5, Insightful

      a lot of the nation is overcast today. We still have to pay to go to the doctor. Dog poo does not yet smell like peppermint.

      As someone who lives in a country with a National Health Service, it tickles me to see it sandwiched between two "impossible ideals".

      --
      "Wise men talk because they have something to say; fools, because they have to say something" - Plato
    5. Re:So much for not sacrificing ideals for safety. by happyslayer · · Score: 5, Insightful

      By temperament and voter registration, I'm a Republican; however, I voted for (and hope for) an Obama win because the path the government has taken over the last 7-8 years has saddened and disgusted me. I'm glad he won.

      But, I am not a "believer." Now that the opposing party is in charge (just like the GOP was for all those years) it's going to be hard for them to put away all those neat new toys that Bush & Co. left behind. This is because it's hard for the party on top to admit that a power or capability is too dangerous to use (dangerous as in potentially or outright abusive of Constitutional rights.)

      If there were ever a prime time to hold your government's feet to the fire over policy, now is the time to do it. Otherwise, it will be fait accompli, and we'll start hearing things from this administration (and its supporters) like, "But we're not Bush; we're better than him!"

      Just my inflation-adjusted 2 cents...

      --
      Never confuse movement with action. --Hemingway
    6. Re:So much for not sacrificing ideals for safety. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      Oh come on, it took an entire 3 days for him to officially step on that promise, I think he's doing better than bush already!

    7. Re:So much for not sacrificing ideals for safety. by Captain+Splendid · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And yet, just like most Americans, he has access to shit TV, unhealthy snacks, cheap drugs and legal pornography. What's the downside again?

      --
      Linux, you magnificent bastard, I read the fucking manual!
    8. Re:So much for not sacrificing ideals for safety. by Necreia · · Score: 5, Funny

      Clearly you've not had a Dog who has eaten all the Candy Canes on a Christmas Tree.

    9. Re:So much for not sacrificing ideals for safety. by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The truly ironic part of course is that such a policy ultimately leads to loss of all safety for those who try to "protect" themselves so.

    10. Re:So much for not sacrificing ideals for safety. by eth1 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The government might as well change the national motto to "The Appearance of Safety at Any Cost."

      Fixed that for you...

    11. Re:So much for not sacrificing ideals for safety. by Rei · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Oh come on, it took an entire 3 days for a Deputy Assistant Attorney General under Alberto Gonzales who is acting Attorney General until Obama's pick is confirmed step on that promise, I think he's doing better than bush already!

      Corrected that for you.

      --
      My hand to God. Baby geese. Goslings. They were juggled.
    12. Re:So much for not sacrificing ideals for safety. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      oh you pay for it. and if you don't go to the doctor much, you probably pay more for it than you would if it was private.

      Exactly why we shouldn't allow this sort of thing in America! For that matter, when did my taxes start subsidizing wasteful government spending on things like fire departments and the army? My house is not on fire or being invaded by a foreign country, so why should I have to pay for those things?
      Obviously what we should do instead is set up multiple competing private institutions with the goal of making a profit through distributing the costs of those services across arbitrary subsets of the population while also artificially inflating those costs...duh!

    13. Re:So much for not sacrificing ideals for safety. by stewbacca · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That's a crock. My wife is having a baby next month and the whole thing will be about $4000. With negotiated rates and my company pitching in $1,000 to my HSA, it is not even a blip on our financial radar (the birth, the baby and next 18 years very much so on the radar). We've had 9-months to save up for it, and long before she got pregnant, we were planning for it. Americans will drop $5k on a 60" hdtv, but don't want to spend a dime on doctor bills to have a baby. WTF?

    14. Re:So much for not sacrificing ideals for safety. by frieko · · Score: 5, Informative

      Actually most developed nations with universal health care pay about HALF what we do per capita. Germany tops out the list at about 75%. I can't say that nationalizing would make it cheaper, but I can't imagine it possibly getting any worse.

    15. Re:So much for not sacrificing ideals for safety. by TarrVetus · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Americans will drop $5k on a 60" hdtv, but don't want to spend a dime on doctor bills to have a baby. WTF?

      This will probably get me modded for flamebait, but...

      The developing perception is that people should not have to pay for health care--at least, they do not wish to perceive paying for it. It can be argued that a government would wish for its population to be healthy and productive, but I can make all of my other health choices for myself: I pay for what quality of food I want, buy tobacco or alcohol at my discretion, and purchase gym memberships/exercise equipment/etc. with my own money. If I want to spend less on good food for a good computer, I should be able to. I don't expect my tax money to go to a national food program which will hand me vouchers for my meals.

      When looking at the situation from that perspective, it's odd that one can choose all of those things, but expect the government to assist with or choose healthcare. If I want good healthcare, I'll save my money, and negotiate with the healthcare providers to pay them if I cannot do so right away; I have done this for expensive emergency trips to the hospital without insurance.

      Being without health insurance doesn't doom us, but it does change what we have to do. I would rather have the choice of insurance, and pay when I need healthcare, than no choice to pay for everyone's insurance and a compulsory 'safety net' for myself.

    16. Re:So much for not sacrificing ideals for safety. by Shakrai · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What's the downside again?

      Higher taxes, more governmental control over our lives and less individual freedom?

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    17. Re:So much for not sacrificing ideals for safety. by assassinator42 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It might not be a blip on your radar, but what about someone making $20k or less a year? And I don't know anyone who'd spend $5k on a 60" HDTV.

    18. Re:So much for not sacrificing ideals for safety. by mweather · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Can you give an example of this government control and loss of freedom in, for example, Canada? And can you explain why they have about the same taxes (I'll give you a hint, the last people they invaded was US.)

    19. Re:So much for not sacrificing ideals for safety. by element-o.p. · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That's a crock.

      As long as there are no complications, that is. When my daughter was born, she spent the first five days of her life in the NICU due to a respiratory infection. IIRC, that was around $20K after paying for the birth and related expenses.

      While most middle-class Americans can cough up $4K with a little advance planning, a surprise of an additional $20K can be a pretty heavy load.

      So, while I really hope your baby is born healthy and there are no unwelcome surprises (I wouldn't wish five days of not knowing whether or not your baby will ever get to go home on anybody), don't fool yourself into thinking that you can plan for all medical expenses by preparing a little ahead of time.

      --
      MCSE? No, sir...I don't do Windows. Yes, I am an idealist. What's your point?
    20. Re:So much for not sacrificing ideals for safety. by genner · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Buahahahahha.....oh wait you were serious let me laugh even harder.

      I'm reminded, completely coincidentally of course, of something I've been meaning to ask for a while now... Can someone explain to me the difference between 'Troll' and 'Flamebait'?

      It's the same diffrence as funny and insightful but only applies to people you disagree with.

    21. Re:So much for not sacrificing ideals for safety. by Omestes · · Score: 5, Funny

      search /. and look for all the posts I've read from Canadians bitching just about how much they pay in taxes.

      Doesn't everyone bitch about taxes? I thought that was the universal principle that unites all of humanity.

      --
      A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government. -edward abbey
    22. Re:So much for not sacrificing ideals for safety. by dwarfking · · Score: 5, Informative

      Citing Health care In Canada

      A February 28, 2006 article in The New York Times stated, "Accepting money from patients for operations they would otherwise receive free of charge in a public hospital is technically prohibited in this country, even in cases where patients would wait months or even years before receiving treatment...Canada remains the only industrialized country that outlaws privately financed purchases of core medical services."

      emphasis mine. Canadian citizens are not allowed, by law, to spend their own money to receive medical treatment if they desire to, unless of course they go across the border into the United States. Which makes sense, because

      According to a 2007 article from CTV News, the Canadian medical profession is suffering from a brain drain. The article states, "One in nine trained-in-Canada doctors is practising medicine in the United States... If Canadian-educated doctors who were born in the U.S. are excluded, the number is one in 12."

      The doctors themselves are leaving to work in the US.

    23. Re:So much for not sacrificing ideals for safety. by jo_ham · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The "long waiting lines" in the UK and Canadian health care systems are a myth perpetuated by US propaganda from certain special interest groups who desperately hope that the US system stays as it is.

      Sure, in a system that's not perfect you are going to see some waits, and it's not going to be quite as "lick your ass service" as a private healthcare clinic in the US (but really, how many Americans actually have access to that service).

      The national insurance that I pay is a tiny amount compared to my salary, and my taxes are not that much higher than the US (except VAT/Sales tax [15%], gasoline [70%] and alcohol/cigarettes [40% ish]), but we have ways to offset those costs.

      There's no way I pay 50% in taxes, compared to my income.

      The US insurance companies may try to play the "omg, free healthcare means crippling taxes for all citizens, even if you don;t get sick! Then you're paying for your friends and neighbours when they get sick and you're healthy! How unfair is that! It's totally like communism! Buy our healthcare and $400 prescriptions!"

      When a medicine taken by a patient costs $100 per month, and costs $5 in Cuba, you know there's someone paying off a loan on a 100 foot yacht, and it;s not the person taking the medicine.

    24. Re:So much for not sacrificing ideals for safety. by Shakrai · · Score: 4, Insightful

      and my taxes are not that much higher than the US (except VAT/Sales tax [15%], gasoline [70%] and alcohol/cigarettes [40% ish])

      So your taxes aren't that much higher than the US except where they are that much higher than the US? Is that really your argument?

      There's no way I pay 50% in taxes, compared to my income.

      Well bully for you. I on the other hand make a whooping ~$30,000 and between income/social security/medicare and state/local taxes I'm paying nearly 30% of my income out in taxes. I don't know about you but I feel more confident in my ability to spend some of that $9,000 for my own benefit than I do in the ability of some government bureaucrat to spend it for me.

      When a medicine taken by a patient costs $100 per month, and costs $5 in Cuba, you know there's someone paying off a loan on a 100 foot yacht, and it;s not the person taking the medicine.

      Windows XP costs <$5 in Cuba and China but that doesn't mean that cost accurately reflects what it cost to produce that product. I'm no big fan of the pharmaceutical industry and would like to see many reforms (starting with patent reform) but this idea that they can't charge a fair price for their product is absurd.

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    25. Re:So much for not sacrificing ideals for safety. by joggle · · Score: 4, Interesting

      And they aren't denied in the US? Senior citizens have a high rate of being uninsured in the US you know. However, I don't think the UK has the best healthcare plan in Europe (France probably has the best).

      They must be doing something right in Europe though because every country I've checked on the CIA's factbook has a higher life expectancy for both men and women and a lower rate of infant mortality than the US.

    26. Re:So much for not sacrificing ideals for safety. by ogdenk · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I would take nationalized crap health care vs no healthcare any day. I'd be willing to pay 35% or so in flat income taxes with no returns.

      Insurance for my family (me, wife, 2 kids) through my employer would cost $1,200/month. I make 30k/yr. Do the math. That's half my salary BEFORE taxes. I don't qualify for Medicaid. That's with the employer paying a chunk and that's a plan with a $2,000 deductible.

      Now I've got the state putting tax levies on me because I couldn't pay for the last year on a $12,000 hernia surgery that my wife needed and my son's visit for a ruptured ear drum. They are talking about seizing my property. I make just enough to make my rent and basic utilities. I have had impacted wisdom teeth for 4 years. I need dentures as well. I drive a paid-for beat-up vehicle with 200,000 miles on it because I can't afford a car payment. My wife is unable to work due to the cost of daycare for the kids in proportion to what she'll make with little experience in the workforce.

      So if they are against people like me, an educator and a community-oriented person who goes out of their way to help people having access to health care then FUCK THEM. I deserve to live too. Just because I'm not some privileged prick or some bottom-feeder unemployed welfare case, doesn't mean I don't deserve health care too.

      In my opinion, even as a libertarian, ensuring everyone has affordable equal access to health care (via taxes if necessary) falls right in line with securing the rights of the people. The right to LIFE. Part of remaining alive means remaining healthy. Allowing hospitals to destroy my livelihood financially without even a court hearing just because I want to stay alive and no longer be in pain is the opposite of securing MY rights.

    27. Re:So much for not sacrificing ideals for safety. by jo_ham · · Score: 4, Insightful

      These are the stories that people need to see. The old adage that anecdotes are not data just can't really apply here. There are thousands of families in exactly your position across America who are crippled by the healthcare system, but that doesn't matter - even if there's only the one family, it's too many and you really have to look at changing it.

      America is the wealthiest, most powerful country in the world, and yet, it is the same country that puts altered, injured and confused patients into cabs and gives the driver $15 to drop them off on the street outside homeless shelters wearing nothing but a hospital gown because they have no insurance and no family to pay the bill.

      And the gap between medicaid, the so-called solution for those who can't afford insurance, and the level of income you need to be able to afford insurance creates an *enormous* poverty gap like an open sore on the face of the most powerful, richest nation on Earth.

      The US has the ability to create a national healthcare system, it just needs the will to do it, and has to be prepared to piss off a lot of people who like things the way they are because they get very rich on the backs of people who need to pay for medical care.

      A society is judged not by the way it treats the well off, but by the way it treats the less well off, and in health care issues, the US is *way* down there in the toilet.

      Don;t get me wrong, I love the USA. I just hate what they've done with medicine.

    28. Re:So much for not sacrificing ideals for safety. by Minupla · · Score: 5, Interesting

      My US born wife lives with me in Canada. When she was living down in the states, she was a retail worker who made retail worker wages. Her health insurance through her employer cost her 500$/month.

      Making some reasonable assumptions for hourly salary and assuming she was working a full 40 hrs (she usually didn't), that means she was paying 28% of her salary for health care.

      Put another way, in Canada with the same income, she'd be paying 25% for her whole income tax load. Therefore her health insurance ALONE was costing her more then her entire income tax burden in Canada. (I made the assumption she was living in an expensive province, with the highest provincial tax rate, her taxes would be lower in most other provinces).

      We just had our first daughter. The entire out of pocket cost was 300$, because we upgraded to a private room. My wife was pre-eclamptic, which meant they needed to induce. We spent 4 days in Labour and Delivery due to complications, with 24 hr specialist nursing care (they sat in our room most of the time, and were 15 seconds away when they weren't).

      After 4 days of complications the doctors recommended a C-section (our choice to do it or not), we accepted their recommendation and my wife was C-sectioned. Our daughter had a touch of Jaundice, so they wheeled a light unit into our room and we spent another 4 days in the hospital.

      My wife is of the opinion that even with good medical coverage in the states (like the package that I was offered when I looked for work down there), we'd be out of pocket probably 10K in co-pays for the whole experience (we were high risk, so there were about 10 ultrasounds, 4 cardiac exams, etc). Let me repeat that number again: 300$ out of pocket, and it would have been 0 if we hadn't decided on a private room for the last part of our stay (Labour and Delivery was private anyways, so those days don't count).

      Now in my particular case, most years, yes, I probably am a net contributor to the medical system, given my salary. I'm OK with that, knowing that someone else who goes through what we went through will have the same care I and my wife did. Being proud of my country counts for something, and I'll pay for that feeling.

      Min

      --
      On the whole, I find that I prefer Slashdot posts to twitter ones because I don't get limited to 140 chars before
    29. Re:So much for not sacrificing ideals for safety. by Skjellifetti · · Score: 4, Interesting

      TANSTAAFL: When you do not use private markets to ration health care, you must still ration health care. In Norway (based on what a Norwegian friend tells me), health care to the elderly is rationed by assuming all old folks have consented to "Do Not Revive" orders. If you do want to be revived if you are old and obviously dieing, then you are expected to pay for the added cost. This is not unreasonable. Norwegian society has decided that it is not willing to bear the expenses in these cases, but will pay for others (e.g. young adults with cancer). This is not unjust since all health care is rationed everywhere, it is merely a different way of rationing health care than our U.S. market system which is content to let anyone die who cannot pay the bills for their own treatments.

      A better way to think about which system has better outcomes is to pretend that you have not yet been born. You do not know if you will be born into a rich family or a poor one. You do not know if you will be given healthy genes that give you the opportunity to live to 100 or a cancer gene that will kick in when you are 12. Which health care system would you prefer to be born into? One that you pay for through taxes, that guarantees everyone a basic level of care, and covers major problems up to some age or cost limit (many Euro countries) or one that each person is expected to pay for themselves based on their own personal medical history and, well, too bad if you were, say, born with diabetes (the U.S. system)?

  2. Hail Obama, Savior of America. by jcnnghm · · Score: 5, Funny

    Finally, change we can believe in!

    --
    You don't make the poor richer by making the rich poorer. - Winston Churchill
    1. Re:Hail Obama, Savior of America. by Slammer64 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Finally, change we can believe in!

      Just because he promised "change" doesn't mean it'll be a "good" change!

    2. Re:Hail Obama, Savior of America. by Jeremi · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Finally, change we can believe in!

      Not to defend Obama on this particular issue, but here's a brief recap of what he's done since becoming president, 72 whole hours ago:

      1. Halted the questionable legal proceedings against people held at Guantanamo Bay
      2. Ordered the shutdown of the prison at Guantamo Bay
      3. Ordered the shutdown of CIA "black sites"
      4. Ordered the CIA to stick to the Army Field Manual for interrogation purposes (read: no more torture)
      5. Overturned Bush's order to limit release of presidential records and FOIA documentation
      6. Began diplomatic overtures to Iran
      7. Began talking to Israel, Palestine, Egypt, etc, to hasten resolution of the Israel/Palestine violence
      8. Rescinded the Mexico City "gag rule" on government aid to agencies that provide information on abortion
      9. Froze white house salaries at existing levels
      10. Passed an executive order banning ex-White House personnel from lobbying the White House until after Obama is out of office
      11. Inquired about extending the use of open source software in government

      So do these things qualify as "change"? I'd say so. Certainly none of these things would have happened with a Republican still in the White House.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    3. Re:Hail Obama, Savior of America. by Failed+Physicist · · Score: 4, Insightful

      (Although I do agree that these people need to be getting some sort of trial before they are held indefinitely. However, if they are not American citizens, they are not subject to the bill of rights.)

      Two words: Fuck you.

      People like you are the reason why I won't travel to the united states, and why I've personally advised many friends against travelling there too. I reckon I've stopped more than a dozen tourists from heading there, and I'm proud of it. There are thousands or more of other people like me around the globe, and we are doing our best on this matter. Your fucking arrogant elitist attitude of "they are not citizens, they do not deserve rights" begets nothing else.

    4. Re:Hail Obama, Savior of America. by Clandestine_Blaze · · Score: 4, Informative

      I stated a fact. The bill of rights only protects citizens of the USA. It doesn't protect anyone else. That doesn't mean that foreigners should not have any protections, or that the Bill of Rights shouldn't apply. It doesn't and legislation would have to be made to make it apply. Although you would be correct in that I don't think all of it should apply. I am surprised you got modded up as "Insightful". I think a better modding would have been: "Inciteful".

      You did NOT state a fact. You stated your personal belief. That does not make it a fact, no matter how hard you try. Tell me where in the Bill of Rights it says that it applies ONLY to U.S. Citizens?

      Ninth Amendment - Protection of rights not specifically enumerated in the Bill of Rights.

      The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.

      Did you see the word citizen in there? There was a reason why the founding fathers specifically used the word PEOPLE and not CITIZENS. If the Bill of Rights only applied to U.S. Citizens, then the Government could just strip away your citizenship and do whatever the hell it wanted to you.

      In fact, if you read any of the Amendments that compose the Bill of Rights, you will not see the word citizen, but only people. Citizenship is not implied. As long as you are legally on U.S. soil, or are being held in the capacity of the U.S. Government, you have rights.

      Bill of Rights

      The Bill of Rights prohibits Congress from making any law respecting an establishment of religion, affirms an individual right to keep and bear arms and prohibits the federal government from depriving any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.

      Again, please inform us where it ONLY applies to citizens?

  3. Give it time by gatkinso · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Obama might not always be right.

    Bush might not have always been wrong.

    There just might be a valid reason for this (then again there might not be).

    They guy has been in office less than a week. Progress has already been made.

    --
    I am very small, utmostly microscopic.
    1. Re:Give it time by bigstrat2003 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There just might be a valid reason for this (then again there might not be).

      I can't imagine any valid reason for spying on our citizens without a warrant, personally. Or interfering with justice for those who had been violated. Maybe it exists, but I find that hard to believe.

      They guy has been in office less than a week. Progress has already been made.

      As of right now, progress is nil. He did some good things so far, but this is a really bad thing. Net gain: none.

      --
      "16MB (fuck off, MiB fascists)" - The Mighty Buzzard
    2. Re:Give it time by kalirion · · Score: 4, Funny

      Bush might not have always been wrong.

      You take that back. YOU TAKE THAT BACK RIGHT NOW1!!!1!

    3. Re:Give it time by vux984 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I can't imagine any valid reason for spying on our citizens without a warrant, personally. Or interfering with justice for those who had been violated. Maybe it exists, but I find that hard to believe.

      Read the PDF that the Obama administration actually filed before drawing any conclusions here.

      The PDF they filed is simply an argument over the mundane details of court procedure, the rules of evidence, which court should see the appeal, etc.

      Granted it has the effect of bolstering Bush's defense, but so what?

      If the police try to get evidence admitted on a child molester, but there is a problem with the evidence, and Obama shows up and says, well the child molester is arguing that the evidence can't be admitted and our legal analysis concludes the same thing... what then?

      Obama is siding with child molestors? Get fucking real. As destestable as child molestors and warrantless government surveillance is, the rule of law protecting them should be observed.

      This blog article is just bad journalism.

      As of right now, progress is nil. He did some good things so far, but this is a really bad thing. Net gain: none.

      Agreeing with Bush's interpretation of the law isn't a really bad thing, especially if that's what the laws say. Ask a lawyer, not a blogger to determine whether its bad or not. And if the law itself is the problem, ask that he change it so that in future we can do better, but don't ask him to break it just to prosecute Bush.

  4. Obama subscribes to the Google Motto by idontgno · · Score: 5, Funny

    "Don't be evil*"

    *for small values of "evil"

    --
    Welcome to the Panopticon. Used to be a prison, now it's your home.
  5. Bad summary of bad article by Reality+Master+201 · · Score: 5, Informative

    That's a very misleading way to state it. What happened, was, the Obama people asked for a stay of the Judge's motion pending appeal.

    It's not an endorsement, as you might think from the summary and linked article, of the policy. It's a procedural move.

    I'm not saying that Obama doesn't or won't back Bush's view. Just that this particular filing doesn't support that conclusion in a meaningful way.

    1. Re:Bad summary of bad article by Reality+Master+201 · · Score: 4, Funny

      Yeah, sorry. Bad habit of mine.

  6. You are wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Warrantless wiretaps are good now. You see, they weren't good before. But they are good now.

    Anyone who can't see that is a racist reactionary.

  7. Obama doesn't even have a DOJ yet... by Lendrick · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The fact that he asked for a stay doesn't indicate much of anything, particularly since a lot of the people at the DOJ right now are Bush appointees (you know the type) who really need to be fired ASAP. By all means, we should be making as much noise about this as possible, but it doesn't automatically mean that Obama is pro-wiretapping.

  8. Uh.. Hello! by phrackwulf · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is so obviously FUD. The administration ordered a stay on all pending regulation and issues from the Bush Administration and this case happens to be one of them. So, what does someone looking to nail Obama do.. "oh well, they aren't immediately disavowing this terrible, terrible injustice, therefore, well they must be complicit!" Shake, stir, and toss to the usual gang of idiots on Slashdot and voila.. A major out of context brouhahah is born! Get a grip, morons.

    --
    What would Richard Feynman do, if he were here right now? He'd do some math and he'd follow through!
  9. Read the filing itself by Reality+Master+201 · · Score: 5, Informative

    The summary and the article it links to make it seem like much more of a big deal than it actually is:

    http://blog.wired.com/27bstroke6/files/alharamainobama.pdf

    It's a procedural motion for a stay pending appeal. It's not a policy endorsement, it's them looking to have the judge's ruling put on hold until appeals are over.

    That's not to say that Obama won't wind up agreeing with Bush on this, just that this particular filing doesn't actually indicate that.

  10. I knew it! by thule · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It was politics all along.

    A court just recently affirmed the legality of it. Obama continues in the tradition.

    The reality is that this stuff has done on for decades. The tradition is that any intelligence collected could not be used to build a case against a US citizen. It is not admissible in court. You cannot be prosecuted based on the intelligence.

    Call Detail Records and metadata are owned by the telco's and are therefore proprietary and not private. They can do whatever they want with them.

    The *only* thing that has changed is that the wall between the FBI and the NSA built during the Clinton administration was torn down. NSA/CIA can now give leads to the FBI that can be taken to a FISA court. The court can provide a retroactive warrant. Only after FISA court approval can the FBI and the Justice Department use the lead to build a case.

  11. Same as the old boss... *literally*. by Rei · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Didn't it occur to anyone here that Obama's attorney general pick hasn't even been confirmed yet? Obama is only nominally in charge of the DOJ at this point. So who do you think it is filing these papers? Well, the names are right in the PDF, starting with Michael F. Hertz. Yes, Michael F. Hertz, Deputy Assistant Attorney General under Alberto Gonzales.

    --
    My hand to God. Baby geese. Goslings. They were juggled.
    1. Re:Same as the old boss... *literally*. by oliphaunt · · Score: 5, Interesting

      This is the answer. See Emptywheel's analysis, here, which reaches the same conclusion.

      She makes the point that the Bushies are probably stalling the Holder confirmation so that the statute of limitations can begin to run out on Bush's FISA wiretap crimes. There is a specific block of time in 2005 where the taps were illegal, between when James Comey refused to reauthorize the program and when Congress rolled over for Bushie and shafted the American people once again.

      The SoL on the criminal portion of FISA is four years, and in about seven weeks we're going to hit that four-year anniversary. So if they can keep Holder out for another few months that's one less act of treason they have to worry about.

      --




      Humpty Dumpty was pushed.
  12. So? by FatSean · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I don't go to church, but I pay so others can go even though I think it is a hateful waste of time.

    I am a product of my society, and have no problem giving back some of my wealth to help my less fortunate fellow citizens.

    I do not agree with most 'welfare' programs that hand out money, but health care is worth the cost.

    --
    Blar.
  13. Nonsense. by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What is trumping is not safety at all, but fear for your safety, which is a very different thing. I challenge anyone to show that we are actually safer now than we were 8 years ago.

    Despite all the "sacrifices" that have been made regarding rights, I don't think so.

    (Note: I put "sacrifices" in quotes, because it order for someone to truly sacrifice something, it has to be given not taken.)

  14. Tell me, where is Obama's name by Rei · · Score: 5, Informative

    in this document? Does that look like his Attorney General's name to you? No, that's Deputy Assistant Attorney General Michael F. Hertz, who served under Alberto Gonzales; Obama's AG hasn't been confirmed yet.

    The US government didn't magically transform itself at the stroke of noon on Tuesday.

    --
    My hand to God. Baby geese. Goslings. They were juggled.
  15. Bush's DOJ still there.. new AG isn't confirmed by rsborg · · Score: 4, Informative
    Please read the dkos comment on this story describing a different view here:

    I took a look at the filing referenced. The only thing that happened as far as Obama is concerned is that he was substituted for Bush as a party, under the applicable federal rule. Otherwise, this filing was made by the Bush DOJ. Let's all recall that Eric Holder hasn't even cleared the Judiciary Committee yet before we start saying that Obama is going to continue with the "unitary executive" theory.

    This is much ado about nothing. Take my word for it. I play a lawyer in real life.

    My take: let's wait this out. It's very important to keep in line, but keep in mind that the AG and new justice dept. aren't even appointed.

    --
    Make sure everyone's vote counts: Verified Voting
  16. I wouldn't be so hasty by McBeer · · Score: 5, Informative

    Obama is blocking almost every policy matter still pending from Bush. This is just one of many issues being blocked until the Obama administration can get caught up and take an official stance on it. He may well "side with Bush", but he hasn't really done so yet.

    --
    Hikery.net - The best hiking site ever. Made by yours truly.
  17. Re:So? by plague3106 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I do not agree with most 'welfare' programs that hand out money, but health care is worth the cost.

    No, it's not. Not until people are expected to take reasonable care of themselves. People aren't "hardwired" to eat more today any more than they were 50 years ago. It's a personal choice, and people like to sugar coat the truth or say "it's not your fault," but if you're obese, its YOUR fault and YOU need to get your diet under control. Instead of making excuses (or letting others do it for them) these people need to act.

    Until that happens, I'm not going to support national health care. And before you tell me it costs more to treat other symptoms related to obesity, I say cut off health care to treat those as well. You want to be fat and get diabetes? Fine, don't expect anyone to help you pay your related medical bills.

  18. More FUD by Sta7ic · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think it's unfair to react knee-jerk to this and denounce the new President. He's been there for three whole days and is probably still learning where all the conference rooms and restrooms are. Jumping into the middle of an ongoing court case and having the lawyers completely overhaul the strategy that they've been working on for months or years would be one of the easiest ways to throw a monkey wrench into existing operations without having a full grasp of the entirety of the issue.

    Give him six months, and THEN give him hell for supporting warrantless [and unconstitutional] wiretaps.

  19. Re:Calm Down. by Knara · · Score: 4, Informative

    See http://news.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1102577&cid=26579795 This isn't even worth of "this sucks". It's almost a non-story. I'm sure that Wired is getting tons of ad impressions, though.

  20. Re:So? by LandDolphin · · Score: 5, Funny

    It's like a choose you own adventure post

    --
    Spelling and Grammar errors have been added to this post for your enjoyment
  21. Naysayers and Doomspeakers by TiggertheMad · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I read a few of the comments following this story, and they all seem to have a similar theme of having a fairly negative POV about Obama's stand on this issue.

    Rather than simply bitch about your spin on this, lets look at why he is doing this. IANAL, but it seems to me that he is holding on to secret information pending the outcome of legal process to determine if it is admissible evidence. This would seem to be prudent, as if it is admitted as evidence, it is no long really secret. Any lawyers out there, please jump if I am getting this wrong.

    --

    HA! I just wasted some of your bandwidth with a frivolous sig!
  22. Re:So? by staryc · · Score: 5, Funny

    It's a personal choice, and people like to sugar coat the truth or say "it's not your fault," but if you're obese, its YOUR fault and YOU need to get your diet under control.

    These are the same people that probably sugar coat the truth and then eat it.

    --
    The most perfidious way of harming a cause consists of defending it deliberately with faulty arguments. - Nietzche
  23. Has it ever occurred to any of you... by almitchell · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...that maybe, just maybe, Obama did this because when he finally got to the throne he learned the reasons this made it out there in the first place? That maybe, just maybe, there might be something, or some reason, that the mighty Slashdotters don't know? That when he sat down with everyone, he sat back and said "Oh, gee whiz, I hadn't realized that was why Bush & Co. did that. now I get it. Hmm. Maybe I shouldn't screw with it."

    --
    Baseless self confidence kills more people each year than bathtubs.
  24. Re:So? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Until that happens, I'm not going to support national health care.

    You're already supporting national health care. It's just not universal health care. The US government spends more per capita on health care than many countries, including Canada. But instead of putting money into the pockets of doctors, you're putting money into the pockets of insurance company shareholders.

  25. Do you believe in Democracy? by mangu · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I am a product of my society, and have no problem giving back some of my wealth to help my less fortunate fellow citizens.

    You are free to do so, I also believe in that, may I recommend the organization I use do distribute my wealth?

    I also give some of my money to a health insurance policy. Everyone who believes in having some security against unforeseen health problems are also free to do so. But I also believe in freedom of choice. I'm free to choose the exact level of protection I want. I don't want to be spoon-fed with a health insurance plan.

    Did I make a wrong choice? Ooops! Perhaps I didn't have the health insurance I needed, perhaps I crossed the street at the wrong time, perhaps I ate the wrong mushroom. But at least it was *MY* choice, I'd rather die of a disease my health insurance didn't cover than from a disease the State Health Insurance Plan didn't provide for.

  26. Mod parent up by fyoder · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The blinders that rich people in the US use to not see the large percentage of the population which isn't well off are are amazing. There are a shitload of people for whom a 60" HDTV is just not an option, and for whom lack of health care insurance is a real hardship.

    --
    Loose lips lose spit.
  27. Re:So? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    no: then you are a hypocrite

    False. It's the sort of thing that only works if everyone does it. This relates to the concept of cooperative play in game theory, and one of the reasons why we have an evolutionary drive towards tribalism.

    Think of it this way. Let's say five of us have access to a fishery. It can indefinitely support each of us catching one fish per week. If any of us overfish it, however, then the fishery goes dry (i.e. runs out of fish) and is permanently destroyed.

    We understand that this is the case, and would like to keep it indefinitely. Are we just going to restrict ourselves out of own volition? Of course not; it doesn't work. All it takes is one guy to decide to overfish it, and the fishery is destroyed. In fact, you know of several people who will overfish it unless they are stopped.

    So are you a hypocrite if you overfish it? Not at all. It's going to be destroyed by your neighbors; you may as well take what you can.

    The only way this can work is if we ALL agree to band together: should anyone step out of line, the rest of us have to punish that person. In tribal times, this would simply be violence or death; nowadays it's prison or a fine. With this system, we can work together, and the fishery can be sustained indefinitely.

    You can see in this example why you have such a wide range of base instincts and why they are so useful. This is why people are altruistic; it is necessary for this scenario to happen. This is why these same people are vengeful; possibility (or certainty) of revenge or punishment is a strong disincentive towards taking advantage of someone.

    As an aside note, this is *exactly* how wildlife regulations currently work in the civilized world. You have an allotment of fish or mammals you are allowed to fish or hunt; if you poach, you get a fine or prison.

    Like your 'donations' scheme, it only works if everyone does it. I'm not going to donate to health care in a two tier system when a negligible percentage of the population does it. It won't make a difference and I'm wasting my money.

    If you haven't guessed, I am Canadian, and I like the system we have here. I am never sick, but I am more than happy to pay my share, because everyone does. We are a better country for it.