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Obama Admin Fights Missing White House Email Lawsuit

DesScorp writes "The AP reports that the Obama administration has picked up where the Bush administration left off on the missing White House email issue by trying to have a lawsuit dismissed that would have kept investigating whether or not email was still missing. Two advocacy groups suing the Executive Office of the President expressed disappointment with the Obama administration's actions. Tom Blanton, director of the National Security Archive, noted that President Barack Obama on his first full day in office called for greater transparency in government. The Justice Department 'apparently never got the message' from Obama, Blanton said."

345 comments

  1. CHANGE by MindlessAutomata · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I don't think people quite got what "YES WE CAN" really meant. They didn't read the "FUCK YOU OVER" at the end that was implied.

    1. Re:CHANGE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The more things change, the more they stay the same.

      http://www.statesman.com/news/content/news/stories/world/02/21/0221clinton.html

      There will be no change today. Just because Obama is president doesn't mean the way government and big business operate is going to change.

      What Clinton has done has made me think twice about Obama and his cronies. Did we really get change or just more of the same?

    2. Re:CHANGE by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Or as the joke went "Hope and Change: Obama hopes you don't notice the only change is from a Rep to a Dem in the White House." but I think Bill Hicks nailed this one over a decade ago. Sadly cancer took him away from us too soon, because his wit could sure be used right about now.

      Pretty much the only "choice" we have in voting anymore is Coke VS Pepsi. Because both sides are bought before you ever get a chance to say anything. And the only problem with "The lesser of two evils" is you're always voting for evil,no matter what.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    3. Re:CHANGE by Aphoxema · · Score: 1
      --
      "Most people, I think, don't even know what a rootkit is, so why should they care about it?"
    4. Re:CHANGE by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I don't think people quite got what "YES WE CAN" really meant. They didn't read the "FUCK YOU OVER" at the end that was implied.

      In other words, voting for change doesn't mean you get it. The one common aspect to most forms of intoxication is that eventually you have to come down from the high. Obama rapture is no exception.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    5. Re:CHANGE by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      What does that actually have to do with anything? McSame voted with the Shrub more than 95% of the time, and NObama is strictly following the party line. For your argument to mean anything they would have to actually be "mavericks" which I hate to tell you was just PR. Both the DNC and RNC are bought and paid for, and have been for quite a long time. That is why you will never see Kucinich or Paul given the nomination- they are simply not good "party" people and don't tow the line.

      I am going to make a prediction, which I bet most Repubs are going to hate, but watch it come true: The high ups in the RNC are going to be still enamored with Caribou Barbie in 2012 and will run her against Obama which will result in a landslide for Obama. But at least while the race is on SNL will be funny. But while the people wouldn't pick Caribou Barbie their perceptions are easily swayed by the MSM. And if the old guard makes a few phone calls all the talking heads like Rush and Hannity will be gushing all over Barbie and talking about what a wonderful President she'll make. She WILL win the nomination but lose the general by a landslide.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    6. Re:CHANGE by Aphoxema · · Score: 1

      It's remarkable you extrapolate so much from just a link I gave you! The link was only in reply to

      "And the only problem with "The lesser of two evils" is you're always voting for evil,no matter what."

      We can live our lives by adages or we can make new decisions for our own generation. For someone who trusts neither the Democrat or Republican party, you are precariously positioned in regurgitating the same bullshit I've seen posted all over the internet.

      --
      "Most people, I think, don't even know what a rootkit is, so why should they care about it?"
    7. Re:CHANGE by jellomizer · · Score: 1

      I am sorry if the Bush administration Deleted those emails like I suspected they did. And with a bunch of defrags and/or writing over the data. The data is gone... Sorry Bitching and Moaning and spending money on already rich lawyers wont do anything special.
      While people got energized with the "YES WE CAN" Speech my impression that President Obama is more a pragmatist and wont change everything overnight until there is better understanding about the factors going on. Unlike the Ultra Liberals thing not everything the Bush Administration was wrong. So right now the new president will need to filter threw all the decisions and rules and see if they were right or wrong.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    8. Re:CHANGE by that+this+is+not+und · · Score: 1

      'Voting for change' is like hoping that the weather will be 'temperature' outside tomorrow. The direction and magnitude were left off, for some reason.

    9. Re:CHANGE by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Alright, I'll play. How exactly are you going to "make new decisions for our own generation" when your choices are "rich corporate ass kissing sellout" A or B? Because by the time they reach presidential level they owe a LOT of favors, and have taken lots of bribes...err I mean lobbyists money. So how exactly are you going to affect this "new decision"?

      Hell in my state they don't even give you A or B anymore, as the repubs don't bother most of the time so you only get A. Once in a while the green party will pull a name out of a hat just to make it look like it is an actual contest, but since the green candidate doesn't advertise, debate, run radio ads, etc they might as well have just drawn a name out of a phone book.

      So please tell me, if i am supposedly just "regurgitating the same bullshit" how is your magical vote going to be worth a bucket of warm spit when the only choices you get are hand picked by the old money boys and the only ones you hear about on the MSM are the ones they approve of? You might have a little luck at the local level, but if it is anything like the local level here the corruption is generations deep, but at the state or national level? Not a snowball's chance in hell of a "non party approved" candidate. Why do you think the amount of voters that actually bother has been in decline for so long? It is because folks have seen it is a case of "meet the new boss, same as the old boss" and that in all the categories that count, like honesty and looking out for We, The People first, there really isn't any difference between the two. Both sides chase the green so bad and kiss so much big money ass we might as well change the National Anthem to "Mighty Mighty Dollar Bill".

      So let us all be enlightened by your wisdom and you explain how with two lousy pre-bought choices you are going to "make new decisions for our own generation" because this is one magic trick I would like to see.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    10. Re:CHANGE by Aphoxema · · Score: 1

      I just can't talk to you, you assume way too much.

      --
      "Most people, I think, don't even know what a rootkit is, so why should they care about it?"
    11. Re:CHANGE by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Translation: I don't actually have a clue but i want to say "America Fuck Yeah!". But thanks for playing, maybe you'll get a toaster in the new stimulus package.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    12. Re:CHANGE by Aphoxema · · Score: 1

      See? Another assumption, if you took one minute to read anything else I've said on /. you'd realize nationalism is the furthest thing from my mind.

      --
      "Most people, I think, don't even know what a rootkit is, so why should they care about it?"
    13. Re:CHANGE by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      You said, and I quote: "We can live our lives by adages or we can make new decisions for our own generation." You also accused me, again quoting: "For someone who trusts neither the Democrat or Republican party, you are precariously positioned in regurgitating the same bullshit I've seen posted all over the internet." and yet when I asked to elaborate as to HOW you plan to "make new decisions for our own generation" suddenly I am "assuming" too much and you CAN'T explain.

      This is like saying "I have a way to solve the economy and give everyone a million dollars" and when someone asks HOW you plan to pull off this miracle you reply "You assume to much so I can't explain anything to you." so for someone who accuses ME of slinging bullshit it sure as hell smells like you are slinging some yourself. I can back up my position with links if you like. Here is one showing how 16 million men have simply stopped voting altogether. And of course here is a nice one about the culture of corruption in congress, with lobbyists simply buying whichever side wins.

      I can go on ALL day backing up my positions, so let us see you do the same, or at least have the guts to explain WHAT your position is. Because I still want to hear how you are going to pull off this miraculous "make new decisions for our own generation" when your choices are bought before you can do anything. You can't turn 1+1 into 3, you actually have to have an uncorrupted choice to start with and I can provide links all day long that show that is something we simply don't have. Hell it is so bad our comedians make jokes about it. So please enlighten us.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    14. Re:CHANGE by Aphoxema · · Score: 1

      You completely misunderstand, I'm not disagreeing with your political positions one bit, just your philosophical approach. You seem to be so negative and every one of your responses is an avalanche of verbosity.

      You, dear Slashdotter, are an amazing specimen of overreaction. Chill out, yeah?

      --
      "Most people, I think, don't even know what a rootkit is, so why should they care about it?"
  2. Apparently by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    They didn't get the email.

  3. missing emails .. by viralMeme · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Does anyone seriously believe the excuses as to how the emails went 'missing'?. Even if they deleted the emails there would be numerous copies on the backup tapes.

    1. Re:missing emails .. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      if an email is deleted before the backup process runs there will be no backup.

      The excuses actually seem pretty plausible to me. Archiving all email isn't easy, and without directly being told I can see how the RNC IT guys would overlook it.

    2. Re:missing emails .. by Monkeyman334 · · Score: 1

      Wow, good idea, except that was in TFA:
      Recently, the Bush White House said it had located 14 million e-mails that were misplaced and that the White House had restored hundreds of thousands of other e-mails from computer backup tapes. The steps the White House took are inadequate, one of the two groups, the National Security Archive, told a federal judge in court papers filed Friday.
      They even use "emails" as the plural "email" like you do.

    3. Re:missing emails .. by Aphoxema · · Score: 1

      Do you have any idea how much of a bitch it is to keep backups of gigabytes or terabytes of data constantly preserved and updated? How much time it takes to make an image and put it on tapes?

      --
      "Most people, I think, don't even know what a rootkit is, so why should they care about it?"
    4. Re:missing emails .. by Darkk · · Score: 1

      Kinda reminds me of Nixon days... Watergate mess.

      Everything do get backed up on tapes but they are recycled after so many days or months. So if the retention policy is every 3 months then it'll get recycled.

      When I was working for a large data center I created a backup policy as follows:

      Daily backups are kept 30 days.
      Weekend backups are kept 90 days.
      Month end backups are kept for 1 year.
      Year end backups are kept for 3 years.

      Problem with e-mails you can't rely on your backup software alone. You need another product like GFI MailArchiver which basically keeps every piece of email of the entire office in a separate database which is also backed up to tape and is kept up to three years before purging it from the systems.

      The White House isn't some small mom and pop shop. We're talking about classified information and strict protocols which have to be followed. Which means everything is tracked and achieved in a vault somewhere. It's just a question of who have access to them.

    5. Re:missing emails .. by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Does anyone seriously believe the excuses as to how the emails went 'missing'?

      Well, swamp gas and a weather balloon COULD have done it.

    6. Re:missing emails .. by Simulant · · Score: 1

      "The White House isn't some small mom and pop shop. We're talking about classified information and strict protocols which have to be followed. Which means everything is tracked and achieved in a vault somewhere. It's just a question of who have access to them."

      Or maybe, they just don't back up mail (with any significant retention) as a matter of policy? I've been in several environments where users' email was routinely deleted as a matter of policy. CYA.

    7. Re:missing emails .. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They went out of their way to structure an e-mail system that would "lose" e-mail as far as backups are concerned, so they lost e-mail. Not hard to believe at all. It's all about plausible deniability these days.

      (Heh. CAPTCHA is "improper")

  4. The stimulus package concession? by plasmacutter · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    Is this the "concession" to the republicans for the stimulus package?

    --
    VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
    1. Re:The stimulus package concession? by jcnnghm · · Score: 1

      I think they'd have had to actually vote for it (excluding the 3 house RINOs) for there to be concessions.

      --
      You don't make the poor richer by making the rich poorer. - Winston Churchill
  5. The bailout mascot by ionix5891 · · Score: 3, Funny
    1. Re:The bailout mascot by Ardeaem · · Score: 1

      Did I miss something? How is this post on topic?

    2. Re:The bailout mascot by Metabolife · · Score: 1

      You missed something.

    3. Re:The bailout mascot by Ardeaem · · Score: 1

      I reread the summary, and I've seen the news...I don't see what the White House emails have to do with the stimulus bill. Unless this is Fark.

  6. who would do the work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Who would have to do the work hunting down the "missing" emails? If the task falls to Obama's staff who weren't even there during the whole Bush thing, then I can't really blame him. If you took on a new job, would you like to be told that rather than focus on the tasks that they were hired to do, instead your staff was going to have to digging around through your predecessors crap to try to find something that may or may not be there?

    1. Re:who would do the work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hah! It's Obama, so you "can't really blame them," but I bet if McCain won, you wouldn't be so forgiving.

    2. Re:who would do the work? by oDDmON+oUT · · Score: 1

      "Who would have to do the work hunting down the "missing" emails?"

      If there was openness and transparency in these things, then the person/s or organizations wanting the records in the first place could be enlisted to aid in their recovery thus freeing "your staff [from] digging around through your predecessors crap".

      Unless, of course, there's something there that you wish to hide.

      --
      Some days it's just not worth
      chewing through my restraints.
    3. Re:who would do the work? by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 2, Funny

      If McCain won the least of our worries would be Bush's emails but the fact the old man will keel over any day and leave a complete dimwit in control of the country.

    4. Re:who would do the work? by bechthros · · Score: 3, Funny

      "and leave a complete dimwit in control of the country." ...again...

    5. Re:who would do the work? by INT_QRK · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'm quite certain that President Obama and his staff recognize, now that they are in executive power, that any precedent weakening executive privilege (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Executive_privilege) also weakens separation of powers, and would very likely come back on him in the future. In politics, what goes around very often comes back around. So, every opponent wants more "open" policy making, while every executive wants to be able to have his ducks in a row to fight once, rather that dying by a thousand cuts while opponents criticize every step of the sausage making process.

    6. Re:who would do the work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unless, of course, there's something there that you wish to hide.

      What could Obama possibly have to hide? He's been there a month.

    7. Re:who would do the work? by twotailakitsune · · Score: 1

      That is what scares me. Only one month and he has things to hide.

    8. Re:who would do the work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's... kind of a bizarre line of reasoning. Separation of powers relies on each branch having its defined role without overlap, *and* on checks and balances between the branches.

      Executive Privilege, as practiced by Bush, is strenuously opposed to both; *no checks at all* to verify whether the Executive branch is acting out of the bounds of their defined powers.

    9. Re:who would do the work? by kingramon0 · · Score: 1

      Separation of Powers is a myth anyway. Congress represents the people, and the people being the originators of government power and authority, have oversight over all areas of government.

      The end of Article 1, Section 8 explicitly states this: "Congress shall have the Power... To make all Laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into Execution the foregoing Powers, and all other Powers vested by this Constitution in the Government of the United States, or in any Department or Officer thereof."

    10. Re:who would do the work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I pity you that the only worry you had of McCain's near-presidency was the fact that he was old.

    11. Re:who would do the work? by jesterzog · · Score: 2, Interesting

      If the task falls to Obama's staff who weren't even there during the whole Bush thing, then I can't really blame him. If you took on a new job, would you like to be told that rather than focus on the tasks that they were hired to do, instead your staff was going to have to digging around through your predecessors crap to try to find something that may or may not be there?

      In principle I agree, but I'm confused about why partisan staff should be involved in this kind of thing in the first place.

      Surely something like the IT system for the Whitehouse, as with many other things, should be run by an entity that's independent from partisan politics in the same way that the courts are independent and the law enforcement is independent. These people shouldn't report to the President or his/her staff except for very indirectly. They should report to someone who ahs a responsibility to the government but not to the currently presiding party.

      Security and robustness should be required as part of the design of how the government works -- not something added on a whim by the current administration if it happens to match their policies at the time. If old partisan staff get fired and new partisan staff get hired whenever there's a change of government, it makes it very clear that they're only there to do things the way the current administration requires, and not the way that's best for everyone.

  7. Job creation. by plasmacutter · · Score: 4, Funny

    Who would have to do the work hunting down the "missing" emails? If the task falls to Obama's staff who weren't even there during the whole Bush thing, then I can't really blame him. If you took on a new job, would you like to be told that rather than focus on the tasks that they were hired to do, instead your staff was going to have to digging around through your predecessors crap to try to find something that may or may not be there?

    they can hire extra IT staff to do the job.

    See, job creation!

    --
    VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
    1. Re:Job creation. by Darkk · · Score: 2

      Actually the government needs to subpoena whoever is in charge of IT at that time.

      The new IT staff shouldn't be responsible of whatever happened during Bush's administration. They can try look for lost e-mails but there is no telling exactly what happened to them. I believe the deletions were on purpose to cover up whatever was going on at that time. The thing is they have to prove it.

      Even the exchange server keeps transaction logs. They too can be purged.

      I wish them luck finding the lost e-mails.

  8. I dunno. by Aaron_Pike · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I kinda like leaving it the courts. If it does go to court and a decision is rendered, it might help stop future sneaky behavior. Wishful thinking, I know, but it'd offer better protection than just capitulating would.

  9. Just More of the Same Change ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

    The only change in the Obama administration is the change in Obama's pockets.

    Since Obama took over the presidency, he has doubled the amount of governmental spending. He has spent more as a percentage of the GDP than any other president in history. He has yet to cut any wasteful programs as he reiterated again and again during the campaign.

    After spending record amounts of money without cutting any "wasteful" programs, he now claims he wants to reduce the deficit by 2/3 by increasing the tax on the employers. (Who do you think the "rich" are anyway???) What monies are the "rich" going to use for the development of their businesses? (No, you can not write it all off. If you buy a $100,000 piece of equipment, you can only depreciate 1/5th of it per year. And that only writes off the taxes not the full amount anyway). The employers will keep their expensive homes -- by laying off workers.

    He has had to recant most of his cabinet picks because they hadn't paid their taxes or were under investigation. (The funny thing is that the Obama Administration KNEW about these problems but thought that people would give them a pass.)

    An amazing number of the rest of his appointees are direct holdovers from the Clinton Administration. Yep, that's change alright.

    When he closed Guantanimo, he didn't even know what bill he was signing until his attorney told him at the signing / press conference or what would happen to the prisoners. (Literally, he asked his attorney "what happens to the prisoners" to which his attorney told him: "We will form an exploratory committee.") Do you get the feeling Obama is simply a patsy for the rest of the DNC? He certainly isn't leading, Reed and Pelosi are.

    Obama is a wonderful speaker. I'll give him that. But all the rest of Obama is fluff and hot air. It is amazing that the American public were dupped into voting for someone with NO RECORD and NO EXPERIENCE. In his single term in the Senate, he voted "present" more often than he voted for or against anything.

    Don't expect any change. Obama's brother in Africa lives in the slums and makes $20/year. Obama never gave his family member any of the change from his pocket -- don't expect him to do the same for you.

    1. Re:Just More of the Same Change ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Too bad this is moderated down -- It's 99% accurate. I'm not aware of him voting "present" in the US senate, though. Not that it matters much, since he spent 2 years in the senate then was "not present" for 2 years while running for President.

      It seems like he's unwilling to make any real choices, though. Like an 800 million stimulus bill, and he's happy to have 0 input on it. Or putting Hillary Clinton in the state department and letting her install all her cronies (who are there because they're loyal to her, not because they're competent).

      Obama gives a nice speech, but he doesn't show any signs of leadership.

    2. Re:Just More of the Same Change ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry that I am again replying to my own post. That should have been: Too bad this is moderated up -- It's 99% inaccurate.

    3. Re:Just More of the Same Change ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry, I was right the first time. Obama just makes me want to flip-flop.

    4. Re:Just More of the Same Change ... by Qrlx · · Score: 2, Insightful

      he now claims he wants to reduce the deficit by 2/3 by increasing the tax on the employers. (Who do you think the "rich" are anyway???)

      Why shouldn't the rich pay more taxes than the poor?

      Haven't you ever heard of Robin Hood? You do realize he was one of the good guys, right?

      With Bush, we reduced taxes on the rich. Did their money trickle down? Not so much. Instead, they used it to inflate a huge stock market bubble. Now, everyday Americans see their retirement savings cut in half.

      Seems like not taxing the rich was a huge mistake.

      (The same mistake was made before the Crash of '29 and the Great Depression, though other mistakes were made too.)

    5. Re:Just More of the Same Change ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hillary Clinton's appointment to Secretary of State also reveals that his claims of being a Constitutional scholar are a sham. Article 1 section 6 of the federal constitution prohibits any member of congress from being appointed to any federal office during the term for which they were elected if that position was created during their term or the wages were increased during their term. Obama's "solution" (which, admittedly, has some erroneous "precedent") was to have Congress reduce the wages to what they were when Clinton was elected to the Senate. Sorry, it still violates the plain language of the constitution.

    6. Re:Just More of the Same Change ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, he cited the Lord of the Rings and the specific wording of that section "during the Time for which he was elected" Since Hilary Clinton is NOT a "he" this doesn't apply.

    7. Re:Just More of the Same Change ... by ravenshrike · · Score: 1

      He was a quasi-good guy in an economic situation so different from the current one as to make it incomparable, and when the 'rightful king' stepped back in he quite quickly stopped dicking around. Not to mention that it wasn't a stock market bubble, it was a housing bubble, which caused everything else to crash. If the housing bubble hadn't been created in the first place, the market still probably would have been above 10,000 points, but since it did crash it wiped out all the major money dealers, which caused the disturbances since.

    8. Re:Just More of the Same Change ... by ptbarnett · · Score: 2, Informative

      Seems like not taxing the rich was a huge mistake.

      No, the mistake is claiming that the rich aren't being taxed.

      http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/88xx/doc8885/EffectiveTaxRates.shtml

      In 2005, the top 20% paid 86.3% of federal income taxes, and 68.7% of all federal taxes (social security, individual and corporate income, excise). The average pre-tax income in that quintile was $231,500, although that was adjusted for household size. See the footnotes for an explanation.

      For the top 10%, it was 72.7% and 54.7%, on average pre-tax income of $339,100.
      For the top 5%, it was 60.7% and 43.8%, on average pre-tax income of $520,200.
      And for the top 1%, it was 38.8% and 27.6%, on average pre-tax income of $1,558,500.

      The same URL provides information about effective tax rates, which range from 25.2% for the top 20% to 31.4% for the top 1%, when accounting for all taxes.

      In comparison, the lowest 20% paid 0.9% of all federal taxes, on average pre-tax income of $15,800. The facts are a lot different than the propaganda.

    9. Re:Just More of the Same Change ... by twotailakitsune · · Score: 1

      Robin Hood. The tale of "Richard the Lionheart" taxing the people to death so that he could have his Crusade. While his poor bro had to deal with people being upset over it. John had to pay from the Crusades at Richards orders, so the money that Robin Hood took was money that was to help the people. That is the tale of the evil Robin Hood.

    10. Re:Just More of the Same Change ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The rich should pay no more and no less taxes than the poor. By definition, there are always less poor than rich. Thus the rich will always be outvoted by the poor. So the poor will always vote themselves as much money as they can creating runaway spending -- such as we have in our government today.

      In regards to Robin Hood, if you actually paid any attention to the story, Robin Hood didn't rob from the rich and give to the poor. Robin Hood reclaimed tax money from the sheriff and gave it back to the people who earned it (the poor). Robin Hood did not steal money from just any rich person he came across but specifically those who collected onerous taxes and returned the money (as best he could) to those who earned it.

      The current crisis was mostly created by congress under Bill Clinton who passed housing laws such that banks had to give out loans to people to whom they ordinarily would not have. When the economy faulted, those people started defaulting on their loans creating an ever escalating situation and created a crash. If the government would not have intervened in the market, this would not have happened. (I'm not saying that there never would be a crash -- simply not this crash.)

      If you were an employer and you made say: $100,000 (a nice round number for sake of discussion) and you paid yourself $15,000, and had 8 workers you paid $10,000 each and you had a house, boat, vacation home, etc. all worked out on this budget with the last $5K going to taxes. Then then government comes in and says you now need to pay $25,000 in taxes, where are you going to get the money? Well, you can raise prices -- if the market will support it causing inflation. You can also elect to lay off 2 people causing unemployment for somebody. You can also sell your house, your boat, etc. and downscale. (Hurting the housing and boating markets and the industries that support them.)The truth will probably be somewhere between the first two since most employers will not sell their houses due to an increase in taxes. Those are your options. Taking money from those who have earned it and giving it to those who didn't is not charity, it is theft.

      The bigger issue is whether it is moral for the government to do collectively what you can not do individually. For example, it is immoral to murder someone. Is it then moral for the government to do so? After all, it isn't you, it is the GOVERNMENT. You would probably say no. Is it moral for you to take money from someone you feel does not deserve it and give it to someone you feel does? No, that's theft and you will end up in jail. Is it moral for the government to the same? No -- only the government will not go to jail for theft, just as the government will not go for jail for murder. Just because you can vote yourself other people's property does not make it right.

      But back to the point of the original post, Obama isn't changing anything. So when it comes to e-mails, why would you expect him to provide Bush e-mails when Obama is more of the same -- if not worse?

    11. Re:Just More of the Same Change ... by Qrlx · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Your well-formatted, statistically dense post conveniently glossed over the fact that income taxes are not reflective of the entire tax burden.

      Care to have another go at it?

    12. Re:Just More of the Same Change ... by hairyfeet · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      You want to know why folks voted for Obama? Two words: Caribou Barbie. MCSame was an idiot for picking Caribou Barbie as his running mate. He is old, has already had cancer once already, and frankly the thought of Caribou barbie in the big chair scared the hell out of a lot of folks. My dad owns a SMB and for the first time voted Green Party. Why? Because he didn't like NObama but couldn't stomach the thought of Caribou Barbie in the big chair.

      Not that I honestly thinks it matter much anymore, because short of a revolution things aren't going to get any better. The laws and politicians are by the lobbyists, for the lobbyists. See the Sonny Bono extension act as one of thousands of examples of laws written by lobbyists(in this case Disney) and the bribes...I mean donations aren't even done in the back room anymore, but out in the open. So all those that complain about "Obama VS McCain" are missing the big picture: BOTH are whores, the only difference is who gets first choice when fucking the country. With the Repubs it is big business and defense, and with Dems it is Hollywood and labor. Frankly BOTH completely suck and are a waste of your time voting for them.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    13. Re:Just More of the Same Change ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, that tax burden is about right..... if you look at wealth in this country, the top 20% own about 83% of it(in 1998, its probably more skewed now)
      http://answers.google.com/answers/threadview?id=2050

      Yeah, and damn people living on 1316 dollars a month.

    14. Re:Just More of the Same Change ... by novakyu · · Score: 2, Informative

      Your well-formatted, statistically dense post conveniently glossed over the fact that income taxes are not reflective of the entire tax burden.

      Is there any other federal tax burden that the poor and middle class, as a whole, bear more heavily than the rich?

      Sales tax is local. Property tax is local. Even vehicle tax is, seeing how it's levied by the DMV of each state, local.

      At the federal level, the rich have been getting shafted on the income tax and haven't even been getting a word of thanks for supporting the rest of the country (federally-supported-program-wise, which is most of the welfare program in U.S.).

      Yes, perhaps the poor pay more sales tax. But sales tax is not part of the presidential (or even congressional) platform.

    15. Re:Just More of the Same Change ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do it yourself lazybones!

    16. Re:Just More of the Same Change ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      [quote]Care to have another go at it?[/quote]

      Care to provide evidence to counter, as the GP did, instead of just attempting to be witty? Perhaps something showing that the income tax is a minor or negligible portion of the "entire tax burden"?

    17. Re:Just More of the Same Change ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well according to the pareto principle they should be paying at most 0.0009% -- 20%^{log_{80%}^{20%}} -- of taxes because that is the percentage of the income that they receiveh.

    18. Re:Just More of the Same Change ... by Qrlx · · Score: 1

      Social Security is a Federal tax, and it's actually regressive. Medicare is a Federal tax. Fuel tax is partially Federal tax.

      I can't say for certain, but I think at least some of the telephone tax is Federal. Passport fees, 9/11 security fees, federal tobacco tax; Americans pay a lot of Federal taxes, and not just on April 15th.

      On the notion that the rich are getting shafted, let's consult the CIA World Factbook:
      Since 1975, practically all the gains in household income have gone to the top 20% of households.

      If that's your definition of getting shafted, sign me up!

    19. Re:Just More of the Same Change ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      he now claims he wants to reduce the deficit by 2/3 by increasing the tax on the employers. (Who do you think the "rich" are anyway???)

      Why shouldn't the rich pay more taxes than the poor?

      Haven't you ever heard of Robin Hood? You do realize he was one of the good guys, right?

      With Bush, we reduced taxes on the rich. Did their money trickle down? Not so much. Instead, they used it to inflate a huge stock market bubble. Now, everyday Americans see their retirement savings cut in half.

      Seems like not taxing the rich was a huge mistake.

      (The same mistake was made before the Crash of '29 and the Great Depression, though other mistakes were made too.)

      the crash of 29 was caused by banks putting money into the stock market, as well as the dust bowl creating famine.

      Robin hood is fantasy, there were people like that in history but most would keep most of the money and give little to the poor or keep it all. There should be freedom for each individual, not one person or group(committee) that's how thing like the french revolution come to be and end with.

      The real rich dynasties and the like will always win because they will bribe the government with their money to be untaxed, the middle and poor will suffer most under tax burdens because they cant escape. If there is high taxes then the market will search for other producers and consumers, leaving us with nothing to buy that we can afford.

    20. Re:Just More of the Same Change ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As far as I'm concerned, the more money you make, the higher your tax percentage should be - by a long shot. As a matter of fact, there should be a ceiling at which every additional dollar you make is taxed at 100%. People who think they're entitled to earn millions a year for doing less work than someone making pennies flipping burgers need a wake-up call. There's no such thing as "deserving" more money and possessions, no matter what your job is.

      No, I don't flip burgers. I make a decent enough salary, and I am damn HAPPY to pay a hell of a lot more tax than someone who can't even afford to feed or clothe themselves and/or their family. People who live the rich life have absolutely no right to complain about not having enough money to buy their third beach-front property in [insert foreign country].

    21. Re:Just More of the Same Change ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Shafted" hardly seems like the word. They get their money's worth in the end. If being rich is so hard they can change that if they choose.

    22. Re:Just More of the Same Change ... by novakyu · · Score: 1

      Social Security is a Federal tax, and it's actually regressive. Medicare is a Federal tax. Fuel tax is partially Federal tax.

      You will note that GP did include those taxes (well, maybe not the gas tax, but do you have any evidence that the rich, who would be driving more than the poor not to mention use it more for their business, do not pay more than the poor?) and it still came out 20% of the population paid 70% of those taxes.

      If you don't like social security and medicare, by all means repeal them—as the member of the generation who will not receive a single benefit before these programs collapse, I heartily support it.

      Since 1975, practically all the gains in household income have gone to the top 20% of households.

      Have you ever thought about whether they deserved all that income? Of course they did! The Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, and on smaller scale, successful restaurant/shop/other business owners earned all those gains, and more, given the levels of taxation before the Reagan era.

      Those who have grown dependent on the government handouts, on the other hand, did not deserve a single penny of those handouts.

    23. Re:Just More of the Same Change ... by novakyu · · Score: 1

      If being rich is so hard they can change that if they choose.

      'Careful what you wish for. The day when you make it so hard that the rich decide they do not want to be rich with all the taxation ... is the day America collapses.

      You can oppress the rich only so much before being rich no longer makes sense to these rational people.

    24. Re:Just More of the Same Change ... by ptbarnett · · Score: 1

      Read it again, and follow the link to read all the details about tv CBO's methodology. The second set of percentages include ALL federal taxes, including income, payroll, and excise taxes. There's no need for me to "have another go" when the only problem was your failure of reading comprehension.

    25. Re:Just More of the Same Change ... by jwhitener · · Score: 1

      You are describing a symptom, not a cause.

      The rich provide the bulk of the federal tax dollars because they have the bulk of the country's money. You can argue about the percent of income taxed based on your bracket (forever) but posting numbers like yours only show where the money is, and do not illuminate any percent of income taxed disparities.

      This will show you what you really wanted to describe, the disparity in income tax percent:
      http://www.visualizingeconomics.com/2008/03/16/average-income-pretax-vs-aftertax-2005/

      As you can see, the super rich get taxed fairly hard.

      However, look at the differences in gross income pre and post tax. The inequality in after tax income is so massive between the top 1% and just about anyone else, that I have no problem taxing them 40% and redistributing their wealth.

      Go google for income inequality chart/graph. The rich have been getting richer, so I'm not feeling too sorry for them.

    26. Re:Just More of the Same Change ... by ptbarnett · · Score: 1

      [...] I have no problem taxing them 40% and redistributing their wealth.

      At least you are honest about it, rather than claiming the "rich" are somehow paying less taxes than everyone else.

    27. Re:Just More of the Same Change ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At the time the constitution was written, he was generic. Just because politics has changed the meaning of the language in the constitution doesn't mean the constitution has changed its meaning.

    28. Re:Just More of the Same Change ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course if you look at wealth distribution you see that everyone is paying about the same rate.
      "In the United States, wealth is highly concentrated in a relatively few hands. As of 2001, the top 1% of households owned 33.4% of all privately held wealth, and the next 19% had 51%, which means that just 20% of the people owned a remarkable 84%"
      Source: http://sociology.ucsc.edu/whorulesamerica/power/wealth.html

    29. Re:Just More of the Same Change ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you ever thought about whether they deserved all that income? Of course they did!

      Citation needed.

      You pretending that it's business owners who, on their own, created that much value, what about all the lawyers, investment bankers, home flippers, and slum lords? CEOs? I'm sure you can think of others.

    30. Re:Just More of the Same Change ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who benefits the most from having a stable, working society, the rich or the poor?

    31. Re:Just More of the Same Change ... by novakyu · · Score: 1

      Who benefits the most from having a stable, working society, the rich or the poor?

      The poor. The rich are (generally, although you will always find exceptions) very capable people who will always find a way to get a job done, or make a living, with or without a strong law enforcement, or with or without a strong infrastructure (heck, if there wasn't an infrastructure, the first thing the rich would do is build one and make a profit out of it).

      Many of the poor, on the other hand, well, would be dead, if it weren't for the welfare system—after all, isn't that the whole point of the welfare system, for those who do advocate it? (I do not.)

    32. Re:Just More of the Same Change ... by novakyu · · Score: 1

      Citation needed.

      You pretending that it's business owners who, on their own, created that much value, what about all the lawyers, investment bankers, home flippers, and slum lords? CEOs? I'm sure you can think of others.

      It's an opinion; everyone has one, and it doesn't need a citation. If you disagree, well, then you disagree.

      I find your logic, that because *some* of the rich people have gotten rich through dishonest means, *all* the rich people need to be taxed to death, very troubling.

      I mean, isn't that the same logic you could use to argue that because some Arabs were responsible for terrorism, including 9/11, we should imprison all Arabs and make wars on all Arab nations?

      Whatever happened to "innocent until proven guilty"? If someone becomes rich by illegal means, then a strong law enforcement should bring justice to them. If someone became rich by taking unreasonable risks, well, perhaps we can start righting things by *not* rescuing them when their risky investments fail (the very exact opposite of what the Obama administration is doing).

      As for lawyers, well, as hated as they are, they are in that position because they had to go through many, many years of education. Somehow, they thought that education was worth what they would be getting for it, and well, perhaps they are justified in that someone is willing to pay them enough money to repay their cost (real and opportunity) of education many times over. While it is true that America has become an overly litigious society, but those people who sue over truly trivial matters will sue, lawyers or not.

      And finally, slum lords do not pay income taxes. That's why they get caught over tax evasion, not any real crimes they committed.

    33. Re:Just More of the Same Change ... by diamondmagic · · Score: 1

      Why shouldn't the rich pay more taxes than the poor?

      Haven't you ever heard of Robin Hood? You do realize he was one of the good guys, right?

      Robin Hood established justice where it didn't exist, such as the illegitimate gains from corrupt officials. He certianly didn't endorse welfare if that is what you mean.

      And of course the rich should pay more taxes then the poor, a specific percentage minus a handful deductions (set on something similar to the CPI perhaps) for necessities.

      With Bush, we reduced taxes on the rich. Did their money trickle down? Not so much. Instead, they used it to inflate a huge stock market bubble. Now, everyday Americans see their retirement savings cut in half.

      Seems like not taxing the rich was a huge mistake.

      (The same mistake was made before the Crash of '29 and the Great Depression, though other mistakes were made too.)

      What time historically have tax cuts preceded a bubble? Never? How could have the government spent the money better then the people they took it from? A classic example of the broken window fallacy. A tax cut representing a 10% increase in wages can no way, by itself, fund a bubble that pushes house, energy, and consumer goods up to three times their normal value. Where do people get the money to pump up these bubbles, do you think? Saying tax cuts alone causes bubbles is absurd. Where does the money for these bubbles come from then? Credit. What have nearly all the artificial bubbles in history have in common? A policy of easy credit. In 2001 for about a year interest rates were lower then inflation on the CPI. During the great depression, you could purchase stocks on credit, on the presumed future value of the stock!

      There was no one thing that caused this, Greenspan and Burnanke are to blame for low intrest rates, and denying there was ever a bubble, even after the fact. Bush is to blame for wanting a policy of easy credit. PELOSI AND THE DO-NOTHINGS have their fair share of ridiculous acts aimed at getting credit out to people who didn't deserve it (the CRA). We had a trade deficit for years just waiting to come back and bite us. Bush finally catalyzed what was already inevitable with the deregulation and tax cuts. But by no means was any one policy responsible for this all, it is an accumulation of many things over the years.

      Who are the only countries having a problem right now? Why is it the UK is having problems? They didn't cut taxes. Like all the countries that have problems right now, they do have a central bank, and like most countries cut interest rates to "stimulate" - which is exactly what happened, more then they imagined (they just forgot about the inevitable bust that must follow). The same thing happened during the great depression too, countries without a central bank, or on an independent currency like silver, were least affected.

      And if you think taxes alone can solve our budget, you may want to check out Hauser's Law

    34. Re:Just More of the Same Change ... by Qrlx · · Score: 1

      I agree with most of what you said (all of it execpt CRA loans were a minor factor; heck all loans were a minor factor until they got leveraged 30-1).

      But I fundamentally disagree with the notion that this bubble wasn't foreseen.

      Take a look at DHI, CTX, RYL, etc. They peaked in '05, years before the market "realized" something was amiss. These people knew exactly what they were doing. Many Wall Street insiders have stated as much; that it was a game of hot potato, and they knew it, but they kept playing until they all got burned.

      If you believe Greenspan's crocodile tears, well, I assure you he's been crying all the way to the bank, ever since the 80s.

      Fundamentally it's not a whole lot different from what Enron did. The "genius" of this bubble was that it involved so many players -- the Fed, the financial sector, home builders, Congress -- and it involved so many millions of Americans, and finally it was baked to perfection. Who doesn't believe in the American Dream of owning your own home?

      Considering the stakes, it was probably right for the government to blink. Unfortunately it's probably the only sensible thing the government has done in about 35 years of "oversight."

    35. Re:Just More of the Same Change ... by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      Who benefits the most from having a stable, working society, the rich or the poor?

      The poor.

      Wrong answer. A larger, more educated middle class means more customers for whatever business you are in or are invested in, and more qualified workers for whatever business you are in or are invested in. There's a reason why Wal-Mart is pushing for a minimum wage increase and why Henry Ford paid his workers a descent wage: they want people to be able to buy their products.

      Or, alternatively, a middle class and social safety nets are guillotine insurance. Especially in a country with as many guns as we have.

    36. Re:Just More of the Same Change ... by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      'Careful what you wish for. The day when you make it so hard that the rich decide they do not want to be rich with all the taxation ... is the day America collapses.

      Define "rich". America is enormously competitive - look at all the people that go into sports or on reality shows for the chance of making good money. If we do the sensible thing and bring back the 91% marginal tax rates, the fact that people will be practically limited from owning a dozen homes and 4 Ferrari's will in no way diminish their desire for 3 homes and a Ferrari and a BMW and a Mercedes.

    37. Re:Just More of the Same Change ... by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      Have you ever thought about whether they deserved all that income? Of course they did! The Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, and on smaller scale, successful restaurant/shop/other business owners earned all those gains, and more, given the levels of taxation before the Reagan era.

      If the minimum wage had risen at the same rate as CEO pay over the last few decades, it would be over $50 an hour today. If these CEO's are so exceptional, and so worthy of extreme wealth, then where's our exceptional economy?

    38. Re:Just More of the Same Change ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your well-formatted, statistically dense post conveniently glossed over the fact that income taxes are not reflective of the entire tax burden.

      Care to have another go at it?

      And your idiotic, but highly rated response ignores the fact that he specifically quotes "all federal taxes (social security, individual and corporate income, excise)", not just income taxes.

      to quote a not-quite-famous cool-aid drinker: "Care to have another go at it?"

  10. The New IBM PC Jr 9000 by chill · · Score: 2, Funny

    Now with tint control!

    --
    Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    1. Re:The New IBM PC Jr 9000 by Pictish+Prince · · Score: 1

      Now with tint control!

      Please somebody mod this hilarious.

      --
      Only his tendency toward a dazed stupor prevented him from screaming aloud.
    2. Re:The New IBM PC Jr 9000 by iggymanz · · Score: 1

      the sound system sounds a lot better, but the performance is the same

    3. Re:The New IBM PC Jr 9000 by AaronW · · Score: 1

      The graphics were also vastly superior to CGA, i.e. no snow, flickering and it could do 16 colors at 320x200 and 4 at 640x200 (CGA could do 4 at 320x200 and b/w at 640x200). The graphics controller could also be programmed to use the memory for double buffering and scrolling since it used the lower 128k of system memory. The major draw-back was the chitlet keyboard which was later replaced by a much better keyboard. There were 3rd party adapters to use regular PC keyboards as well. Also, it did not support DMA for floppy access which resulted in being unable to type while disk access was taking place.

      --
      This post is encrypted twice with ROT-13. Documenting or attempting to crack this encryption is illegal.
  11. In Defense of Obama by tjstork · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I don't think people quite got what "YES WE CAN" really meant. They didn't read the "FUCK YOU OVER" at the end that was implied.

    I've not exactly come out with enthusiastic support for Obama, but I think in this case the administration is doing the right thing. I do not believe the Presidency should be tracked to the extent that it is, because it undermines the ability of the President to do his or her job. Judge any President by how many bucks are in your pocket, and whether or not the country is at war. Keeping track of every little detail and responding to every subpoena only weakens the President. WE on the right wing hated the way the left continually harassed Bush, and although we know the left would never reciprocate on any showing of principal or good faith, we still must uphold our own conservative principal that two wrongs do not make a right. Just because the left screamed bloody murder about email and the Cheney energy task force does not entitle us to scream bloody murder about email and the stimulus package. These are petty debates and if we are to have a genuine democracy, we should judge programs more by their efficacy and trust that the Constitution was right in the powers it gave to the President, and not the far more limited powers imagined that he has today. If we are to live by a Hamiltonian Presidency, then we should die by it as well.

    --
    This is my sig.
    1. Re:In Defense of Obama by iminplaya · · Score: 5, Insightful

      We must not allow the government to operate in secret. It is our lack of vigilance that put us where are today, with a government that becomes more corrupt with every passing day. We don't need you making excuses for them.

      --
      What?
    2. Re:In Defense of Obama by homer_s · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Judge any President by how many bucks are in your pocket,

      Economic policies have long lag times. It has taken 6 years to the results of Greenspan's low interest rate regime. Similarly, Volcker's policies were very unpopular when they were implemented, but they paid off 3-4 years later.

      You judge a president by whether he has the balls to not push the cost on to future generations and make politically unpopular decisions. A good president would say "we've spent way more than what we have, so let's take the pain for the next 4-5 years and make sure our children are not burdened".

      Don't hold your breath to see someone like that.

    3. Re:In Defense of Obama by Rich0 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I think I can expect a little more from my government than cash in my pocket and no occupying forces in my neighborhood. In particular the way the government treats minorities of various kinds (both in terms of physical characteristics and ideological views) is very important - even if the average person ends up better as a result. Should I be happy if the government institutes slavery if it makes me weathier and doesn't cause a war - I should think not!

      I can't say I'm surprised by the current administration - it is all working out basically how I thought it would. I'm sure that Obama will right some of Bush's wrongs, and create more than a few wrongs of his own. Republicans will hail him as the antichrist, and Democrats will hail him as the messiah. Eventually the Democrats will make some major blunder and the Republicans will sweep in to save the country. Lather, rinse, repeat... No doubt the promoted special interests will be different, but corruption will be there.

      The one thing that gives me hope is that it would be very difficult for the next four years to be as bad as the last four were. It is certainly possible, but I'd think it would be difficult to pull off even by design. That doesn't give the current administration a free pass when they blunder, and it doesn't make any Republican proposal not worth considering...

    4. Re:In Defense of Obama by angelwolf71885 · · Score: 0

      tell that to NIXION

    5. Re:In Defense of Obama by Chineseyes · · Score: 1

      How did the parent get modded flamebait? Does someone have a fundamental misunderstanding of the term flamebait?

      --
      I think the invisible hand of the market has its middle finger extended

      --A wise old fart named SC0RN
    6. Re:In Defense of Obama by tjstork · · Score: 1

      It's funny, but all I was arguing was that the very arguments we conservatives used to defend Bush should apply to Obama as well. Like, if Obama does something that we though Bush did that was ok, why should we be up in arms about it? If you agree that Dick Cheney was right about the Presidency needing to reassert itself over a pathetic Congress, then, that reassertion should apply to the left wing as well as the right, even though we may not agree with the results.

      --
      This is my sig.
    7. Re:In Defense of Obama by Runaway1956 · · Score: 1

      The problem is, today's presidents have more power than the constitution gave to them. Specifically, read the "war powers act". The constitution certainly gave the president no "war powers". Only Congress is supposed to have the power of war. The president's duty is to execute the war, after Congress declares it. The war powers act is a perfect example of what a bunch of idiot politicians can do when they start dicking with things they do not understand.

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    8. Re:In Defense of Obama by tjstork · · Score: 1

      The problem is, today's presidents have more power than the constitution gave to them. Specifically, read the "war powers act". The constitution certainly gave the president no "war powers".

      The thing is, the Founding Father's established the limited ability of the President to engage in military action without congressional consent. Washington did not require consent to declare martial law and put down the Whiskey rebellion, and Jefferson did not seek federal consent for the missions to Tripoli against the Barbary Pirates and undeclared naval war against the French.

      As a matter of tradition too, even though they are not a "declaration of war" in the sense that they do not say "we the USA declare war", Bush the Junior did seek and did get congressional authorizations to attack Iraq and Afghanistan. Even LBJ sought and got approval to invade Viet Nam with the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution. So... my question is, what did the War Powers Act actually change? Not much. Before the War Powers Act, the President had a certain discretion for quick and dirty military operations per his charge to defend the constitution and in his capacity as Commander in Chief, and after the war powers act, he has the same. Both parties know that a significant military adventure requires some form of consent by Congress, and abide by that.

      I note with irony that as much as Jefferson railed against Federal Power and the power of the President, he did all sorts of stuff that he would have previously argued unconstitutional, giving both liberals and conservatives sufficient room to argue that he was really a liberal or a conservative, and he remains one of this country's most popular presidents. Now that, my friend, is some politician!

      --
      This is my sig.
    9. Re:In Defense of Obama by arekusu_ou · · Score: 1, Interesting

      The President needs to be held accountable to the constituency. If he's done something illegal or illicit, he needs to be held accountable to it, which was the point of the missing emails, hiding it. I agree there are more heinous things that Bush and Cheney should be put on trial for, but hopefully this is a step forward.

      The ends justify the means is against everything the country stands for and is fighting against. If we ok that, we ok terrorism because they are only fighting for their own freedom through extreme and desperate measures.

    10. Re:In Defense of Obama by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We should all remember the actions of the "right" during the Clinton administration. No issue was too petty for republican's to generate a subpoena (via their boy Ken Star) to be followed by their shills in the media calling for Clinton's head.

      It is disingenuous to claim that the "left" is unprincipled and operating in bad faith because they use the same tactic. But republican has become synonymous with hypocrisy so it is no surprise.

       

    11. Re:In Defense of Obama by h4rm0ny · · Score: 4, Insightful


      Do not ignore the many non-partisan people who object to any wrong-doing on any party's part. Excusing every wrong by pointing out that someone else did the same wrong, does not lead to a situation with less wrong-doing, but rather more.

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    12. Re:In Defense of Obama by kingramon0 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You should try actually reading the Constitution. The President does not have all the powers you imagine he has, and, in fact, today's presidency is far beyond what it should be.

      The ONLY exclusive power the President has is to grant pardons and reprieves. All other powers are subject to approval by Congress. Even the, much flaunted, Commander-in-Chief power: "The President shall be Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy of the United States, and of the Militia of the several States, when called into the actual Service of the United States;" (emphasis mine).

      Congress calls the military into service -
      "The Congress shall have the Power... To provide and maintain a Navy;

      To make Rules for the Government and Regulation of the land and naval Forces;

      To provide for calling forth the Militia to execute the Laws of the Union, suppress Insurrections and repel Invasions;

      To provide for organizing, arming, and disciplining the Militia, and for governing such Part of them as may be employed in the Service of the United States, reserving to the States respectively, the Appointment of the Officers, and the Authority of training the Militia according to the discipline prescribed by Congress;"

      If that is not enough for you, read further down (powers of Congress):

      "To make all Laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into Execution the foregoing Powers, and all other Powers vested by this Constitution in the Government of the United States, or in any Department or Officer thereof."

      So, you see, Congress has the power to make laws concerning all the power given to the entirety of the Federal government, President included. It really is supposed to be the supreme branch, not co-equal. Too bad today's Congress has no spine and no intelligence.

    13. Re:In Defense of Obama by falconwolf · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I've not exactly come out with enthusiastic support for Obama, but I think in this case the administration is doing the right thing. I do not believe the Presidency should be tracked to the extent that it is, because it undermines the ability of the President to do his or her job.

      He or she was elected by the people and as such the people should know what the president does. Hiding documents show government is not to be trusted.

      These are petty debates and if we are to have a genuine democracy, we should judge programs more by their efficacy and trust that the Constitution was right in the powers it gave to the President

      Trust? Neither the USA's Founding Fathers nor I trust government. And wasn't it Ronald Reagan who said "Trust, but Verify"?

      Falcon

    14. Re:In Defense of Obama by WNight · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yeah, congress rolled over (all along, even now) and would have declared whatever Bush told them was needed. The specifics of who signed (or didn't) which piece of paper seem unimportant.

      As for your earlier point about tracking every presidential actions, it's an issue of trust. If we had a system where we could trust our president, even a little, to mean and do what he says we'd might be willing to look away for a moment.

      Your example of the Barbary pirates is a good one. We do authorize the president to deal with these things assuming that he's acting in our names or will stop if he realizes he made a mistake. Even in areas where this means things that would otherwise be crimes if he didn't have the shield of working in our names like killing pirates, tapping phones, etc.

      Bush lied though. Repeatedly. Directly, and indirectly by paying people to lie to him. He knowingly and in so many words manufactured a case for war where there wasn't one. If we had the info, the people would all be jointly liable for the errors. But by lying to us Bush took away our oversight ability. Essentially starting an unjustified war and (to use the word the rest of the world would, murdering) hundreds of thousands.

      So I'm seeing more of a reason to keep close tabs on the president than not. In fact, if you want to have any claim to the USA being an ethical nation I think you'd acknowledge that we all have a responsibility to ensure that corruption is investigated and harshly punished.

      That trust I mentioned though. I know of one way to have a bit of it. If there was a law (not a one-time decree aimed at parting rivals) that would get Bush tried for his crimes then it would also apply to Obama if he did the same.

      Bush taught us to watch closely or there'd be another torture camp deporting our and allied citizens for torture. If the only way we can avoid the worst depravity is constant vigil than constant vigil it must be.

    15. Re:In Defense of Obama by ppanon · · Score: 1

      Also, as is often pointed out, Al Capone was imprisoned for tax evasion, not for the St. Valentine's Day Massacre murders.

      --
      Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
    16. Re:In Defense of Obama by rohan972 · · Score: 1

      I do not believe the Presidency should be tracked to the extent that it is, because it undermines the ability of the President to do his or her job.

      Follow the history of the west from the Magna Carta, English civil war + bill of rights, French revolution, US revolution, the US constitution etc. The thing that caused us to define ourselves as "Free Countries" is that we limit the governments power. If our standard for how we allow the government to be run was that we don't do anything that "undermines the ability of the President to do his or her job", the Bill of Rights would have to be abolished in its entirety.

      The conservative position, sir, is to make things difficult for the government. If the government lacks the ability to do their job, let them call upon the militia, not suppress and deceive it.

    17. Re:In Defense of Obama by LaskoVortex · · Score: 1

      WE on the right wing hated the way the left continually harassed Bush, and although we know the left would never reciprocate on any showing of principal or good faith, we still must uphold our own conservative principal that two wrongs do not make a right.

      I'm probably the antithesis to everything you believe in, but I still can't fathom why your post is modded flamebait. Are /.ers that far gone? Let me throw my 2c in here for the leftwingers here and add to your thoughtfully constructed post (that I don't particularly agree with 100%).

      First, people, note that I voted Obama in the primaries and for the general election and have contributed to the democratic party and to Obama's election campaign--so I think I have some ground to stand on here.

      But, as much as I may have disagreed with the policies and implementation of the Bush administration, and as friggin' glad as I am to see him out of the office, I expect Obama to move absolutely, positively, 100% in the forward direction. This means that it is my HOPE that Obama works to solve immediate problems and to try to steer the country in a prosperous direction. I absolutely don't want him to digging around the affairs of the last presidency (even the Bush II presidency) to see what kind of dirt he can dig up. Its not relevant to the direction of the country and is a waste of resources. In fact, when Obama's DOJ tries to prevent such dirt-digging, it makes me more confident in his judgment as a president. It's not the business of the president to enact any sort of grudge against former presidents.

      In short, let's try to move past whatever problems we had with previous administrations and focus our attention more on the efficacy of the policies of the current administration. Democracy is a matter of continuing vigilance, not stewing in the past.

      --
      Just callin' it like I see it.
    18. Re:In Defense of Obama by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      A lot of the "up in arms" is little more then a goading to the people who claimed stuff Bush did was the worst thing since they found out the moon wasn't really made of green cheese. It's sort of an "if it was so bad, then why is your guy doing it" thing. It really isn't a double standard as much as it is forcing pretentious asses to admit they might have been wrong or that their guy was no different. It's sort of like the never does anything wrong goody two shoes who always has something to say about your life or something getting popped for doing something they just got done lecturing you on not doing and then bringing that fact up to them.

    19. Re:In Defense of Obama by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And why's that exactly? You let it happen for four years, you decided you liked it so much you elected Bush back for another four.

      What you really need is someone to make excuses for YOU. As of right now you haven't got one.

    20. Re:In Defense of Obama by cyberchondriac · · Score: 1

      The ends justify the means is against everything the country stands for and is fighting against. If we ok that, we ok terrorism because they are only fighting for their own freedom through extreme and desperate measures.

      Really? What "freedom" is Al Quaeda fighting for? The freedom to make us slaves to their tyrant worldview?

      --

      Look back up at my post, now look back down, you're on the Internet. Now look back up. I'm a signature.
    21. Re:In Defense of Obama by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      Excusing every wrong by pointing out that someone else did the same wrong, does not lead to a situation with less wrong-doing, but rather more.

      But it's not hypocrisy to ask those hopping up and down now where as proportionally outraged when Bush was committing crimes in the first place, as opposed to Obama letting them stand. You know the good old IOKIYARTIYAD (it's okay if you're a republican but treason if you're a democrat).

    22. Re:In Defense of Obama by Dolly_Llama · · Score: 1
      The ONLY exclusive power the President has is to grant pardons and reprieves. All other powers are subject to approval by Congress. Even the, much flaunted, Commander-in-Chief power: "The President shall be Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy of the United States, and of the Militia of the several States, when called into the actual Service of the United States;" (emphasis mine).

      I think you've got your emphasis mixed up. The "when called into" bit refers to the militia. The President is the cinc of the armed forces at all times, and the militia too when it's needed. The text says the president has limited powers. The truth is that the president can do what he pleases to the extent that the congress or the courts do not stop him.

      --

      Somewhere, something incredible is waiting to be known. -- Carl Sagan

    23. Re:In Defense of Obama by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      Yeah, you're right. Should've shot 'em all, right?

      --
      What?
    24. Re:In Defense of Obama by arekusu_ou · · Score: 1

      The freedom to not have the western world infringe upon their way of life. The freedom to not be under attack from Americans FIRST. Pushing US policies and ideals which are not appreciated by foreign sovereignties.

      http://antiwar.com/casualties/

      We're crying over the deaths in the 10's and 100's thousand. While we inflict over a million. In a war we started.

      And Afghan. In our selfish fight against "the great evil communism", who did we sacrifice in the millions in that fight turning their civilian land into a warzone? How many Americans died fighting Communism in the middle east then? And ironically, teach and arm the ones we knew didn't like us, and would later come attack us back.

      We always brought the fighting to another land. In another country, so our own would not be damaged. Well guess what, THEY brought it back to the US. After all the millions of innocent civilians dying because of us, FINALLY American civilians are dying too. Maybe we'll learn its not so great a feeling to bring death and destruction to others.

    25. Re:In Defense of Obama by arekusu_ou · · Score: 1

      Is this a pro or con of the ends justify the means?

      He got punished for doing something wrong. People would have liked to see him punished for murders. He was punished for tax evasion. He wasn't framed for tax evasion to punish him for murder. They didn't fake evidence to trialed guilty for the murders.

      The means in this case were completely up and up. Creative, but not ethically, or morally wrong.

    26. Re:In Defense of Obama by kingramon0 · · Score: 1

      And I can do whatever I please, so long as the police do not catch me.

      Sorry, but that argument just doesn't do it for me.

    27. Re:In Defense of Obama by cherrysweet00 · · Score: 1

      agreed.

    28. Re:In Defense of Obama by cyberchondriac · · Score: 1

      Apparently you hate the US for the sake of hating the US.
      In 1990, the US came to the defense of Kuwait and Saudi Arabia after Iraq attacked Kuwait. That's not "infringing" on "their way of life" -which, by the way, frequently includes treating women like property. They still have their way of life. They are still sovereign, and if AQ was such a savior to them, why was he exiled from Saudi Arabia even before 1990?

      Afghanistan, in the '80s, if you'll recall, was attacked by the USSR, not the USA. We didn't start this war. It was the USSR who were not welcome, not us. Again, we came to their aid - so naturally the war was not on our soil. Sure, the US had an ulterior motive (as always) but nonetheless it kept Afghanistan a sovereign nation, and prevented their forced indoctrination into the USSR. How does this justify the actions of AQ against the US?!?

      As to the second half of Desert Storm, often called the Iraq War, Al Quaeda never had a stake in Iraq until we went in there and disposed of Saddam Hussein. And eventually, the Iraqis kicked out AQ of their own accord. On this one point, you may have something, but remember this was after 9-11, not before!

      The current war in Afghanistan, (and possibly the war in Iraq), would not have happened if 9-11 hadn't happened first, let's not mix up the timeline, not to mention cause and effect.

      There is NO justification for the kind of wholesale slaughter and murder of innocents that AQ condones and performs. When innocents die by the US, it's an accident - and we have not killed "millions" of "innocents"- that's a propagandist lie, ridiculously inflated to create hatred towards the US. However, when innocents die by AQ's hand, it's entirely deliberate.
      Intent is a key fundamental difference.

      --

      Look back up at my post, now look back down, you're on the Internet. Now look back up. I'm a signature.
  12. One month... by copponex · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The new Administration has fallen far short of a lot of people's expectations, including mine. Two points though. One, it's been only a month. And two, if you consider the situation that they have been handed, I think they are at least trying to do best that they can. I can't comment on the e-mail case specifically, but I have done a lot of reading on the black hole of illegally held terrorism suspects. In that case, they have two choices: bring lawsuits against a greater part of the current government and past governments involved, or do the right thing from here on out.

    Personally, I would love to see every senior officer kicked out in disgrace over what they have done to American principle. Even if it's often violated in secret, at least we could pretend that we had some moral standards. But when the President and Vice President are ordering torture, renditions, and even assassinations, the chain of command is simply doing it's job. If the new Administration spent years wringing the necks of officers following orders, would the chain of command still work?

    Perhaps if the economic situation weren't so bad, there could be a good year of congressional hearings, where dirty laundry is thrown on the table and people who deserve it are thrown in jail. And sure, the economic crisis may be something that the Obama Administration is intentionally overplaying in order to have some breathing room on everything else. They're not stupid, so they either believe the situation is that dire, or they are pretending to for political purposes.

    For the sake of argument, imagine if you bought out a poorly run company. You may find mountains of incriminating papers, a staff that was half corrupted, and accountants who deserve to be set on fire. But if you're to turn this company around, would the smart thing to do be to march them all into the street for a mob lynching, or quietly and over time reform the company without completely ruining it's reputation in the process? The absolutely right thing to do is probably bankrupt the company and start over. It may be that in the current steaming pile of shit situation that the Bush dynasty has left us, re-forming the government is correct, but reforming the government is prudent.

    1. Re:One month... by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      Perhaps if the economic situation weren't so bad, there could be a good year of congressional hearings, where dirty laundry is thrown on the table and people who deserve it are thrown in jail.

      Pretty good reason sabotage the economy and create a nice distraction. Works better than a sex scandal.

      --
      What?
    2. Re:One month... by bechthros · · Score: 2, Insightful

      i mostly agree with you. i'm gonna godwin myself, though, and say that

      "But when the President and Vice President are ordering torture, renditions, and even assassinations, the chain of command is simply doing it's job."

      is exactly what all the nazis said at nuremburg. "i was just following orders." well, some orders are just evil. and it's every human being's responsibility to know that. if i showed up tomorrow and my boss said, "lock this guy up. don't let him see a lawyer. don't tell him what he's done wrong. then beat the crap out of him and pour water down his throat until he's starting to die a little" i would NOT DO IT. neither would you. THAT's the real issue.

    3. Re:One month... by ravenshrike · · Score: 1

      Yes, creating the RAT board was certainly the best way to create honesty in government. Lets force our inspector generals to clear any controversial investigations with Congress and the RAT board. That's a good idea.

    4. Re:One month... by Aphoxema · · Score: 1
      --
      "Most people, I think, don't even know what a rootkit is, so why should they care about it?"
    5. Re:One month... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are obvious flaws in conflating the Milgram experiment with Nazi war crimes.

      One is the timescales involved. Participants in the Milgram experiment did the bidding of the authority figure for, what? A couple of hours? And the full gravity of their actions didn't even have a chance to hit them until the end of the experiment--that is, they never really had the chance to feel guilt or remorse.

      Another thing is, they didn't have to face their victim. The farther detached you are from the suffering you cause, the easier it is to cause it. There's quite a difference from pushing a button and hearing someone scream to dumping them in a vat of freezing water and staring them in the eyes while they slowly and painfully die of hypothermia.

      You'd have made a better case by referencing the Standford prison experiment, which did stretch on for days, but even there the authority figures themselves were overwhelmed by guilt and stopped the experiment early. (Perhaps because they were not as detached from the consequences of their orders as our government is? Perhaps if our top government officials had to be flies on the wall every time someone was beaten half to death and made to believe they were drowning, the torture would have stopped years ago?)

      Finally, in neither of those experiments was the authority figure real and seriously threatening. If you don't do what the military asks you to, you risk being killed outright, especially if what they're asking you to do is particularly unsavory. If you don't do what a university researcher asks you to, then what? They give you bad looks? They kick you out of the experiment?

    6. Re:One month... by WNight · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I would NOT DO IT.

      Good.

      neither would you.

      Well, I've spent a while saying I wouldn't. Of course it won't be as obvious as you play it so we've got to keep our eyes open.

      But from the discussions about it here I have to assume that most people would be okay with it at least as long as they were assured it was legal.

      The problem is that like how in the global economy our government can't just print new money and have it accepted, they also can't just write off the guilt of a million deaths even if we all close our eyes to it.

      If we were to bet on the time-period in which 85% of the population could go from 'against torture' to operating the torture machine in a Milgram-type experiment I'd guess three days. But only because days one and two would be spent on orientation and classes about the equipment.

    7. Re:One month... by jwhitener · · Score: 1

      "The new Administration has fallen far short of a lot of people's expectations, including mine. "

      In terms of their initial decisions, or the amount they have accomplished (or not accomplished)?
      Because it is pretty safe to say that Obama has done more in the first month than nearly any president in history.

      http://www.truveo.com/Best-month-ever/id/288230385403245323

    8. Re:One month... by Aphoxema · · Score: 1

      The shortcomings of the experiment are significant but explaining them does nothing for the argument. Maybe something more significant needs to be performed.

      My assumption is, and I really do hate to take anything for granted, is the folks 'only following order' were in the belief that Germany would destroy the Allies and at the least their injustices would be forgotten.

      I suppose like any investor who funds a company, the individuals who invested in the war with their decisions should have to lose if the 'corporation' loses.

      --
      "Most people, I think, don't even know what a rootkit is, so why should they care about it?"
    9. Re:One month... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem with kicking every lousy senior officer out, you just bring in another batch of even worst lousy senior officer.

      It is difficult to change everything at a go, frankly only failure. Unless the ideal scenario is totally different, else small changes goes a long way.

      Personally, I believe we have to fight small changes everyday, rather than one huge change.

    10. Re:One month... by N1AK · · Score: 1

      I'm glad to see a pragmatic assessment of the issue. I like to think of myself as a strongly moral person, and have on a number of occasions taken a position against the position of those I am with when I believe they are wrong. However, I could never say with absolute confidence that I would never do something that I would currently define as evil/inhumane etc. This is because there have been so many examples of supposedly good people doing unforgivable things, and I don't understand why, and if they can do it how do I know I won't until placed in that situation?

      I actually think torture should be legal, which given my abhorrence of the act may seem hypocritical. My reason for this is that I can imagine a situation in which torturing someone may be sufficiently likely to save lives that given the choice I would authorise it. I would much rather that the torture of people was openly regulated than hidden. I would for example like for it to be made explicit who could authorise it, and for the fact it took place to be announced openly.

    11. Re:One month... by bechthros · · Score: 1

      i think the issues of abortion and capital punishment make it pretty clear that the morality of everything legal is considered extremely dubious...

    12. Re:One month... by Shadow99_1 · · Score: 1

      Well I've seen some interesting evidence by a professor who works on what he tends to refer to as 'the difference between good & evil'... If you'd like to see a talk on that very topic (whether we would or would not follow such orders) take a look: http://www.ted.com/talks/view/id/272

      --
      we are all invisible unless we choose otherwise
    13. Re:One month... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The new Administration has fallen far short of a lot of people's expectations, including mine"

      Us conservatives tried to tell you liberals before the election . . . When will you ever learn?

      "if you consider the situation that they have been handed, I think they are at least trying to do best that they can"

      If you consider this, if you consider that . . . How about considering that just a few short months ago during the election, Obama could find little common ground with the Bush administration and continued to assert that his style of "change" was what America needed. Now that he has won the election, we find that he has much more common ground with the Bush administration than was ever known. Instead of Obama bringing "change" to America, reality brought "change" to Obama.

      "If the new Administration spent years wringing the necks of officers following orders, would the chain of command still work?"

      "if the economic situation weren't so bad, there could be a good year of congressional hearings"

      "would the smart thing to do be to march them all into the street for a mob lynching, or quietly and over time reform the company without completely ruining it's reputation in the process?"

      He's only been in office for just a month and you already have to create laundry lists of excuses to try to reconcile the Obama you voted for with the Obama you see before you now. If only your kind were so lenient and trusting of Bush. Your double-standard is systemic of your malfunction. In order to shield yourself and your newly elected President from criticism, you've basically said it's okay to forget about past crimes, including what you believe to be murder, for a supposed "greater good." It's really scary to see how little it takes for some to abandon their principles. My code is simple and it doesn't change with each new administration -- we all have to follow the laws, and when the laws aren't followed, the guilty parties should be prosecuted. This punishes past crimes while also serving as a deterrent to future offenders.

      Further, you liberals can't have it both ways by continuing to politically prosecute the Bush administration while legally admitting there was nothing to prosecute. Whether we are talking about impeachment of Bush last year or prosecution of Bush and his administration this year, I've always had utmost confidence that Democrats would prosecute Republicans if they had evidence to do so. When such prosecutions aren't forthcoming, reasonable people must conclude there was never anything to prosecute and the accusations have always been politically motivated. The fact is that Democrats have very effectively used partisan politics against the Bush administration and Republicans to get themselves elected. They knew that if they beat that drum long enough and hard enough, people like you would vote for them. Although, stories like this illustrate how they may have beat the drum a little too hard.

      Just face it, you've been had. The promise of "change you can believe in" was nothing more than a smarmy political slogan which you liberals swallowed hook, line, and sinker. Obama talked a good game and made a bunch of liberal campaign promises, and now you have to face the fact that he isn't the "change you can believe in." In fact, if you're honest, he isn't "change" at all. Any politician can maintain the status quo, and any liberal can spend like they are printing money (oh wait, they are). You needn't have looked further than Obama's record and the record of the Democrat party to know this was going to happen. The problem was that you were too wrapped up in your Bush hating and political bias to realize that nothing is going to "change" Democrats.

  13. Here in Mexico... by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 4, Interesting

    we experienced something similar after an opposition party won the elections for the first time in 70 years. One would expect all corruption would be wiped out, but it didn't happen (mainly because the then candidate president promised not to fire people just because there was a change in the admin). It's OBVIOUS that when the bureaucrats notice they're gonna be watched, they start covering each other's asses.

    Why would the people in the Obama administration be any different?

    1. Re:Here in Mexico... by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      an opposition party won the elections for the first time in 70 years. One would expect all corruption would be wiped out

      No, one would not.

      One would expect to be promised such things, but one should never expect a small event like an election to wipe out something as pervasive as corruption.
      ESPECIALLY in a place as thoroughly corrupt on all levels as Mexico.

      That's like saying that with a diagnosis of metastasizing cancer, one would expect total remission after the first treatment. One should not.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    2. Re:Here in Mexico... by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      ESPECIALLY in a place as thoroughly corrupt on all levels as Mexico.

      The simple truth is that the US is at least as corrupt as Mexico - War On Drugs, while we're the world's largest consumers. World's largest per-capita polluters. World's largest arms dealer (including the biological WMDs that Saddam used to have that we knew were over their expiry date.)

      In Mexico, the cops left the police force to join the drug producers. In the USA, the cops are part of the drug economy.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    3. Re:Here in Mexico... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      State Dept liberals approved the sale of dual use biological and chemical precursors, over the objections of Defense Dept conservatives.

      Once again, liberals fuck America and try to pass the buck.

      I swear, they're like a pervert and a retarded girl. "Sorry you got raped last night. Let me walk you home."

    4. Re:Here in Mexico... by blind+biker · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The simple truth is that the US is at least as corrupt as Mexico

      Wait a second. Do you seriously believe that? Can you so easily dismiss the corruption that permeates the Mexican society (yes, not only the political institutions)? It's a corruption so pervasive, people take it for granted and live by it.

      The USA certainly has the faults you listed, I won't deny any of those, but to say that it's more corrupted than Mexico?

      --
      "The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
    5. Re:Here in Mexico... by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      The simple truth is that the US is at least as corrupt as Mexico

      Wait a second. Do you seriously believe that? Can you so easily dismiss the corruption that permeates the Mexican society (yes, not only the political institutions)? It's a corruption so pervasive, people take it for granted and live by it.

      The USA certainly has the faults you listed, I won't deny any of those, but to say that it's more corrupted than Mexico?

      Besides, if we were that corrupt we wouldn't even notice the wave of violence and corruption that's making it's way around the U.S. from our neighbor to the south. Matter of fact, most of us aren't noticing it, but that's only because our media isn't bothering to report it. I happen to have family in Arizona, not far from the border, and they have a very different story to tell.

      So, yes, comparing Mexico to the United States in that regard is ridiculous.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    6. Re:Here in Mexico... by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      The "bailout" (i.e. handout) is going to cost more than Mexico's entire GDP. I rest my fucking case.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    7. Re:Here in Mexico... by bruthasj · · Score: 1

      See Taiwan's DPP as another example.

    8. Re:Here in Mexico... by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      ESPECIALLY in a place as thoroughly corrupt on all levels as Mexico.

      The simple truth is that the US is at least as corrupt as Mexico - War On Drugs

      There's some corruption everywhere, but it is so pervasive in some countries that you can't get anything done without bribes.
      The US has its own corruption problems, but they're not at a point where you can't get a government employee to do their job without slipping a 50 in your paperwork.

      But the corruption problem wouldn't be as bad in Mexico if they didn't have very powerful corrupt friends on the other side of the border, that's for sure.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

  14. maybe I'm naive by Immerial · · Score: 1

    ...but I think they are still on auto-pilot. The economy has been the big crisis that they are concentrating on. Once this news item floats up, then it will be interesting to see if there is any response and the kind of response. Past articles point to similar experiences. Certain cases and ruling proceed as planned with no directive (or acknowledgment) given from above yet. I presume once he sets his sights on this in the news, the direction will be reversed. But the again I might be naive.

  15. Re:It's government corruption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It sounds to me like you believe everything written in a book simply because it's in a book. Ever read the Bible? :p

    Political differences are not and should never be made into the objects of a criminal witch hunt. The screw will turn, my friend, and your party won't always be in power. Then we'll see how much you like all the investigations.

  16. You don't get it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You guys don't get it.

    The deleted emails were from the Bush admin.

    The whole point of finding them would be purely for political gain. By attempting to dismiss this case, Obama is tring to focus on real issues.

    There is no doubt in my mind that if those emails surfaced it would be extremly bad for both the Bush admin and the republican party. That notwithstanding, Obama realizes that we currently have real problems, problems that won't be solved merely by pointing out where the stemmed from.

  17. The fact is... by Mazcote+Yarquest · · Score: 2, Interesting


    if ANYONE had ANYTHING on Bush he would have been impeached a long time ago...
    This tells me that they are all corrupt, we NEED a viable third (or more) political party(ies)!
    Namely someone who respects the Constitution.

    1. Re:The fact is... by BayaWeaver · · Score: 1

      And who might that viable third person or party be? Ralph Nader? Ross Perot? And how is he or she going raise the hundreds of millions necessary to get elected without the backing of the RNC and DNC? You are in wishful thinking territory over here. Obama (even if don't like him) was the lesser of two evils in the last election.

    2. Re:The fact is... by Mazcote+Yarquest · · Score: 1

      "Obama (even if don't like him) was the lesser of two evils in the last election."

      We will have to agree to disagree... because I do, strongly!

  18. Every president ever has done something like this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Every president since the concept of executive privilege has fought tooth and nail for it. This includes defending your predecessor's use of it. Regardless of intent, Obama could be hurt by a ruling against the previous administration.

  19. backups by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Does anyone seriously believe the excuses as to how the emails went 'missing'?. Even if they deleted the emails there would be numerous copies on the backup tapes.

    You're assuming they were competent enough to actually be doing backups.

  20. Slashdot versus Reality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Slashdot articles about Obama are hilarious. There's always the initial, hysterical article about how Obama is doing something oh-so-terrible (e.g. killing net neutrality). Then, some days or weeks later (if we're lucky) there will be a followup article calmly stating that the previous article was overreacting (e.g. nothing against net neutrality in the stimulus bill).

    Remember all those complains about the stimulus package being full of pork? Then we discover that the supposed "pork" is actually money for schools and Internet access.

    I have no doubt that this effect is replaying itself yet again. It's a good sign that there are so few real scandals that we have to invent our own, but a bad sign that we are so eager to be distracted by scandal.

    1. Re:Slashdot versus Reality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Someone needs to mod that post ^^^^ up as insightful and informative.

    2. Re:Slashdot versus Reality by twotailakitsune · · Score: 0, Troll

      How about the pork for golf courses? Who needs golf courses when you have the internet?

    3. Re:Slashdot versus Reality by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      There's always the initial, hysterical article about how Obama is doing something oh-so-terrible (e.g. killing net neutrality).

      Perhaps the part that would have killed net neutrality was removed because so many complained.

      Remember all those complains about the stimulus package being full of pork?

      The stimulus package is pork.

      Falcon

    4. Re:Slashdot versus Reality by 4D6963 · · Score: 1

      Oh you think the articles are bad? Try reading the comments. A distressing amount is knee-jerk "OMG you see Obama is bad too". What the libertarian apathetic masses that populate Slashdot want to prove is that is that Democrats are just as bad as Republicans, that they're the same side of two different coins if you will.

      Obama made it clear that he cares about the bottom line, not going after the Bush administration to put the blame on them and punish them. But no, Slashdotters are right, let's spend resources and our judicial system's time to kick some ass. It'll all make us feel so much better about our fucked up situation.

      --
      You just got troll'd!
    5. Re:Slashdot versus Reality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Remember all those complains about the stimulus package being full of pork? Then we discover that the supposed "pork" is actually money for schools and Internet access.

      Uh, no.

      Pork is something going to special interests and not towards the collective good (stimulating the job market, in this case). 30m for cleaning up land Pelosi's family has a financial interest in might be an example.

      Obama's response to all the heat was "so what, it only adds up to 1%." Right. 1% that could be going somewhere else, or not spent at all (considering this is money we don't have).

      It's a matter of principle, and it was made loud and clear that the Democrats, who ran on the subject of pay-as-you-go, transparency and ethics, have just as little as the other team.

  21. Re:It's government corruption by digitig · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The U.S. government is VERY corrupt. Bush administration officials [...]

    I know /. news tends to be a bit behind the times, but I would have thought folks would have noticed by now that Bush isn't part of the U.S. government any more.

    --
    Quidnam Latine loqui modo coepi?
  22. New solution! Prevention! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    At least there won't be a problem with future emails, after the Obama administration crashed their mail server. No emails, no problem. Maybe they should just give all the server's disks to the courts and let them find what they can.

  23. Re:openness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Open government is not the American way. We get strength through _pretending_ to be a democracy, not by actually doing it!

  24. Re:It's government corruption by Antique+Geekmeister · · Score: 2, Insightful

    His appointees in the executive branch, his Supreme Court appointments, and the federal bureaucracies he guided most certainly are. They've been battening down the hatches for the last six months or so to protect themselves and continue their current programs and policies. Opening them up is not going to be easy.

  25. Re:It's government corruption by BCW2 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Be serious, they haven't come to grips that the "Savior" is just a Chicago politician, with all the corruption that is part of that phrase.

    Until everyone in Washington is replaced in 3 election cycles (for the whole Senate) there will be no change. Try replacing them with someone who has actually done productive work, not lawyers.

    --
    Professional Politicians are not the solution, they ARE the problem.
  26. Get over it by terryfunk · · Score: 0

    Bush is gone...time to move on. How much longer are people gonna beat up on him and better yet what good will it REALLY do?

  27. Someone once argued.... by tjstork · · Score: 0

    That anonymity, a form of secrecy is necessary for honest communications. If the President cannot communicate honestly, then he cannot do his job. Imagine if LBJ's tapes had been made public during his administration. Do you want to throw away the Civil Right's act because he's also tailing MLK? You can take a paranoic distrust of either people too far and you need to learn how to hope and how to trust. Let the public decisions an administration makes stand for themselves, right wing or left wing, and don't let yourself get trapped up needing to see every frank discussion that takes place behind the scenes. This is a Republic, not a Democracy, and you need to let leaders lead. If you don't like the way they lead, then run for office yourself.

    --
    This is my sig.
    1. Re:Someone once argued.... by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      If you don't like the way they lead, then run for office yourself.

      Doubt I'd pass the piss test, but I will seek out and vote for people who do believe in an open government. The government is our servant, not our master. And remember, he just signed the civil rights act. He didn't write it. His comment? "We just lost the South". I would venture he had no choice. A veto would have probably been overridden. And maybe you don't remember Nixon as well as I do. My message is, if you want want to operate in secret, go somewhere else. Don't want you here.

      --
      What?
    2. Re:Someone once argued.... by itschy · · Score: 1

      This is a Republic, not a Democracy, and you need to let leaders lead.

      These two are not mutual exclusive as you seem to think.
      The US (like France, Germany, ...) are both. The UK is a democracy, but not a republic.

  28. This is getting ridiculous by moxley · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So basically, all of the the talk of transparency was lip service, either that - or they have been made aware of what the content of those emails will show.

    Obama is showing hypocrisy in record time, he's barely been in a month. It's not like he is reneging on a campaign promise, it sure makes it seem like practically his ENTIRE stated message about transparency in government was total bullshit.

    I wanted Ron Paul, and I think that anybody who understands how our government really functions these days, the constitution, the lessons of history as they relate to empires and our debt based Federal Reserve manipulated economy who got a chance to hear his message likely did too...

    Unfortunately I think the current state of the economy and it's effect on the day to day lives of most Americans is spec-fuckin-tacular compared to where it's headed - We're following the path of the Weimar Republic here, and guess how that turned out...

    I live right next door to independence hall - it's literally something I see when I walk outside of my home every morning; I see that, and the eternal flame which burns at the mass graves of al of the unknown revolutionary solders buried in Washington Sq ....it's really sad, and sadness is what I feel every time I see these reminders of our history and founding...our empire is crumbling and most of the people on the street don't even know what the word "empire" means and how it applies to America today and are more interested in some Hip Hop MTV retard beating his girlfriend or what happened on TV last night. We don't need to be an empire, empires always end one way.

    After Obama won (and out of him and McCain) I figured he would be better choice out of the two because at least he was saying he wanted to limit executive power and was all about openness, etc, etc ad infinitum - I knew the guy was a politician, but given the passion with which he seemed infused with he seemed to have some integrity....I guess we'll see how much he really does....

    Right now think the best thing people can do is support the states rights movement - 20 states are taking action to formally remind the federal government of the limits of their power under the 10th Amendment, 20 states are re-asserting sovereignty under the 10th amendment - There is some great stuff going on in New Hampshire also - it seems they really do want to 'live free or die' there...; PA rep Sam Rohrer is heavily active in promoting these resolutions , and it's very important:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K8bbrXnYJOo

    If you are concerned about what the federal government is doing - make sure to support the resolutions, in the state, in the house and senate by contacting your reps.

    1. Re:This is getting ridiculous by Quiet_Desperation · · Score: 1

      If you are concerned about what the federal government is doing

      Sorry, my state government (California) is busy with a financial rape rampage of epic proportion at the moment. They seem to think that one of the biggest and most regressive state tax increases in history is a real good idea in a dying economy, despite every single piece of empirical evidence being against them. We're adopting the NH motto of "Live Free or Die" although we're shortening it to simply "Die".

    2. Re:This is getting ridiculous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First you wanted Ron Paul, then you believed 0bama might have integrity.

      Do us all a favor and never vote again.

    3. Re:This is getting ridiculous by Kirijini · · Score: 5, Informative

      "Obama is showing hypocrisy in record time, he's barely been in a month. It's not like he is reneging on a campaign promise, it sure makes it seem like practically his ENTIRE stated message about transparency in government was total bullshit."

      Whoa whoa whoa, lets look at the actual facts before accusing Obama of "total bullshit."

      The reason this is in the news right now - ie, what actually happened recently - is that the National Security Archive (the good guys who are suing for the emails) filed a response to the Justice Department's motion to dismiss the suit. So what's in the news right now isn't about a recent Obama decision.

      The motion to dismiss was made on January 21st, which is right after the inauguration. Now, if Obama's absolute top priority was to change the government's position on defending against this suit, he could have ordered the justice department not to make the motion. But, what's much more likely, this motion was made by staff attorneys at the Justice Department, completing the job they were ordered to do earlier in January. It seems likely to me that they had finished drafting this motion to dismiss on the prior business day. Since the inauguration was holiday, and the day before that was MLK day, and before that the weekend... its likely the motion to dismiss was ready to be filed on January 16th, and that's when the lawyers' bosses ordered it done.

      Since Obama wasn't in charge of the Justice Department until Jan 21st, the day the motion was filed, it's very likely there's nothing he could have done to stop it - he, and his staff, probably didn't know the motion was ready and ordered to be filed, and probably hadn't replaced the drafting lawyers' bosses yet anyway.

      In fact, that the motion to dismiss was made the day after the inauguration makes it seem very likely that Bush holdovers were just doing everything they could, as fast as they could, to keep the cover up going.

      You should hold your outrage until Obama (who's been pretty damn busy - passing a 800B stimulus package in the first month is unprecedented, but more on point is is ordering all agencies to presume in favor of disclosure when making FOIA decisions) actually has a chance to take a stance in this case.

    4. Re:This is getting ridiculous by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      our empire is crumbling and most of the people on the street don't even know what the word "empire" means and how it applies to America today

      Neither do you, it seems. There are some people that could help define more precisely what an Empire is ... and is not. The Romans, Persians, even the Greeks: a more recent example would be our British friends. They really had that empire business down pat.

      Of course, most of them are dead and buried now: that's the usual fate of empires and empire builders. Now, if you're referring to economic hegemony I'd agree, but that's a very different matter.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    5. Re:This is getting ridiculous by kiddailey · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Passing that 800B "stimulus" bill is more than enough reason to be outraged. Especially given the conditions under which it was pass: Less than 24 hours for the whole of the House to share and review (reportedly) only five copies of a partially handwritten bill that was over 1,000 pages long.

      Nobody read it. And, like Bush before him, Obama used FUD to push it through.

    6. Re:This is getting ridiculous by fermion · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Lets get real here. Most of our problem come from the fact that for the past 12 years, greed and revenge has occupied the governments every working moment. The Clinton people were drunk on greed, and as soon as the republicans won the legislative branch they were drunk on revenge, spending nearly 100 million dollars to prove that he allowed waifs to give him blowjobs.

      This greed and revenge continued, with a unsupported war that is little other than a means to funnel government funds to the people who already have enough money. This wouldn't be so bad, but it has necessitated the killing of countless women and children.

      Now the democrats have said enough is enough. Pelosi all but said everyone who is objective knows Bush and Cheney are criminals, and those who don't will never be convinced. So why waste tax payer money and other limited resources dredging up the past. The children that bush and cheney killed in their greed will not be returned, so lets move on.

      This email thing is the same. Bush criminal activity, shown best to lying to the country about the WMD in the state of union address, is well documented. The fact that he would hide emails is obvious, just like clinton hid documents. It is over. Bush got away with it. We need to move on and fix the problems caused by his greed and megalomania, and fell sorry for those that worship him and cannot accept the fact that he is a criminal. This is the way of the cult.

      So, Obama needs to fix problems, not waste time hashing over old problems for no other reason than to satisfy the needs of the cult. That is what republicans do. Obama needs to get of Iraq and solve the problem in Afganistan, just like should have done on September 12, 2001. He needs to solve the problems in Saudi Arabia, which is where so much of the money for September 11 came from. He needs to refocus the country on community and spiritual happiness, and away from using material goods to hide a otherwise miserable soul. We need to accept that there are always greedy people or all kinds, from the layabout who will abuse social security for a few hundred dollars month to the executive who will rob our treasury of 10 million dollars. These people will have to answer in the end, but we should not damage ourselves by letting ourselves becoming as bad as they are.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    7. Re:This is getting ridiculous by moxley · · Score: 1

      Just like what they did with the Patriot Act...

    8. Re:This is getting ridiculous by moxley · · Score: 1

      Economic hegemony is, in large part what I was referring to...At a time when that's the last thing we need to be doing. Couple that with the institutionalized corruption, the genuinely shady stuff, and our monetary policies we're not in great shape.

      The idea that "America is great and can and should impose it's will upon the world" is bothersome as well, but it is primarily the economic side of it and all that that entails that destroys these empire building nations from the inside out.

      I agree that we've got nothing on what Persia and Rome had historically, nor our friend upon which "the sun never sets," but they all started somewhere.

    9. Re:This is getting ridiculous by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      I agree that we've got nothing on what Persia and Rome had historically, nor our friend upon which "the sun never sets," but they all started somewhere.

      Well, it's highly unlikely that we'll ever be a true Imperial power ... we're pretty far along the slide into oblivion. Nor do we really have the stomach for it: Empires are usually started by more monolithic cultures, countries where the people all have similar ideals that can be conscripted by those in power. We're so damn fractious that the odds of our ever acquiring the combined, sustained effort of will that would permit an Empire is virtually nil. Unless, of course, we go all totalitarian and become a monolithic society by fiat.

      Hell, we can't even manage to annex a two-bit operation like Iraq without tearing ourselves apart over it. Maintaining some degree of economic hegemony, keeping our place in the manufacturing world, is all that will keep us from becoming yet another third-world country looking for a handout. We need to keep creating wealth, need to continue being the nation that makes everything for everyone else, otherwise we'll become a backwater. It's not like we don't have massive competition nowadays: either we get cracking, or we just give it up. There's no middle ground anymore.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    10. Re:This is getting ridiculous by shentino · · Score: 1

      Does anyone else besides me think a two-party system absolutely sucks?

      Both parties are nothing but rubber stamps for special interest groups that use the iron triangle to get what they want.

    11. Re:This is getting ridiculous by Samari711 · · Score: 1

      It should also be noted that the Justice Department jobs are career positions and not political appointments (except when Alberto Gonzales is in charge). That means the people working this case today are most likely the same people who were working the case before Obama took office. I'd attribute any actions in the case to inertia at this point.

      --

      I never said I was smart, I just said I was smarter than you

    12. Re:This is getting ridiculous by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      You make some very good points. I absolutely agree that the most important thing is to move forward, and the last thing we need is an attempt to persecute the previous administration in what would certainly be termed -- at least somewhat accurately -- a "witch hunt" by the ones who would never be convinced that the previous administration did anything wrong. And a good number of these people would be Congressmen. Sounds like a bad choice for an administration who I'm counting on to get things done.

      However, it would be unfortunate if this case is in fact dismissed and these emails are permanently lost. National Security Archive, one of the two plaintiffs in the suit, does a great job of providing information about the past that informs the present. For example, if you ever wondered if Reagan's government really allowed the Contras to sell cocaine in the U.S. to raise money for weapons, well, there you have it in the government's own words.

      In a contemporary discussion about the War on Drugs, knowing that the government that fought this war the hardest and put so many people in jail was also the same government that was partially and intentionally responsible for the cocaine explosion in the 80s is highly useful in seeing how hypocritical the whole thing is.

      In twenty years, I want to be able to point to an official email which shows them asking for skewed intelligence about WMD in Iraq, shows the discussions about invading Iraq immediately after 9/11, or whatever else we can find in these emails so that regardless of whether anyone is ever punished, there will at least be fairly rigorous historical record. If the Global War on Terror is still ongoing, and some blow-hard wants to invade Iraq again because now they're allies with Iran, we can look at the past and see how we got to where we are.

      Seeing as how the Motion to Dismiss was filed on Jan 21, before Obama could have realistically weighed in on the subject himself, and weeks before his Attorney General was confirmed meaning he wasn't even practically in charge of the DoJ, I am not willing to conclude that he really is going to block this lawsuit. Even though there are more important things going on, I'll certainly be disappointed if he does.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    13. Re:This is getting ridiculous by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      The Clinton people were drunk on greed

      On what, exactly? Where were the multi-billion dollar no-bid contracts for Al Gore's former company?

      Pelosi all but said everyone who is objective knows Bush and Cheney are criminals, and those who don't will never be convinced. So why waste tax payer money and other limited resources dredging up the past.

      Why did prosecutors go after O.J. Simpson, it's not like a conviction would have brought back Nicole or Goldman. Glenn Greenwald has a nice series on how there's one standard for the plebeians, and another for the aristocrats:

      What you have is a two-tiered system of justice where ordinary Americans are subjected to the most merciless criminal justice system in the world. They break the law. The full weight of the criminal justice system comes crashing down upon them. But our political class, the same elites who have imposed that incredibly harsh framework on ordinary Americans, have essentially exempted themselves and the leaders of that political class from the law.

      Smoke some pot and you're going to serve some nice time in a PMITA penitentiary. Torture a few hundred people, trash 4 constitutional amendments, treaties, habeas corpus, and it gets covered up.

    14. Re:This is getting ridiculous by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      Especially given the conditions under which it was pass: Less than 24 hours for the whole of the House to share and review (reportedly) only five copies of a partially handwritten bill that was over 1,000 pages long.

      The stimulus was debated for weeks, it wasn't written overnight. Republicans are just engaging in hypocritical (they did far, far worse when they were in the majority) whining (they pointedly REFUSED to be a part of the process) and misdirection (yes, the bill is long - that's why you have your staffers read it).

      And these hypocritical jokers are now running around taking credit for the stimulus bill they just voted AGAINST:

      Rep. John Mica was gushing after the House of Representatives voted Friday to pass the big stimulus plan.

      "I applaud President Obama's recognition that high-speed rail should be part of America's future," the Florida Republican beamed in a press release.

      Yet Mica had just joined every other GOP House member in voting against the $787.2 billion economic recovery plan.

    15. Re:This is getting ridiculous by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      Obama is showing hypocrisy in record time, he's barely been in a month. It's not like he is reneging on a campaign promise, it sure makes it seem like practically his ENTIRE stated message about transparency in government was total bullshit.

      So were you proportionally outraged when Bush was committing these atrocities in the first place as opposed to Obama letting them stand? Or is this another case of IOKIYARTIYAD (it's okay if you're a Republican, treason if you're a Democrat).

    16. Re:This is getting ridiculous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Whoa whoa whoa, lets look at the actual facts . . ."

      I couldn't agree more. How about the fact that Obama and his transition team had been working for months to ensure that what happens on January 21, 2009 is in fact an act of the Obama administration and not that of the Bush administration? You guys are really stretching. I'm glad I've never supported a politician that has ever put me in the position Obama has put his supporters in. If I had, I would call the politician out for their actions rather than make the wild excuses I have been reading. In any case, you will see soon enough that the Obama administration does in fact agree with the Bush administration on yet another issue.

      This will be a recurring theme that you must prepare yourself for. You must face the fact that you have been lied to by Obama and the Democrats in order to obtain your vote. For years, they created scandal, controversy, and outrage around the Bush administration and lazy, unprincipled, partisans such as yourself were all too eager to trust them. Now that you are looking for justice, they have to quietly admit there was nothing to prosecute to begin with. Now you need to admit that you've been had. Admission is the first step to recovery.

      "You should hold your outrage until Obama (who's been pretty damn busy - passing a 800B stimulus package . . ."

      First, Obama didn't actually write the bill. Most Presidents don't, by the way. Second, Obama might have had more time to work on other issues if he had stopped campaigning and went back to work. It's pathetic that he was forced to go back to campaign mode in an attempt to "sell" his huge pork spending bill as stimulus. That proved to be nothing more than an act of desperation as the people aren't buying what Barack is selling anymore. If only the people would have seen him for what he was a few months ago. Now we all have him for the next 4 years. Maybe we will learn our lesson this time.

      "passing a 800B stimulus package in the first month is unprecedented"

      Maybe that should be a tip-off. Did you ever wonder how they had all of that spending ready to go? The stimulus is nothing but a Democrat wish list of pork projects that Bush and Republicans would never pass. When you have 8 years of spending that you have put on hold, it doesn't take long to accumulate a huge spending bill. Just wait until the real spending starts or even when the second "stimulus" package is announced. Obama and his band of pork spending liberals are just getting started.

    17. Re:This is getting ridiculous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This post is not interesting, it is flame bait.

      -- "I'll huff and I'll puff and I'll BLOW your house down!" said the big bad wolf.

    18. Re:This is getting ridiculous by ThinkTwicePostOnce · · Score: 1

      I'd blame the illegally appointed Bushies holding career positions rather then mere inertia.

      A previous administration's holdover appointees can certainly become vicious sabateurs. (Viz. the wretched Linda Tripp)

      --
      Hide all sigs: Click HELP+Prefs (top), VIEWING (last on right), DISABLE SIGS (3rd on left) and SAVE (hidden at bottom).
    19. Re:This is getting ridiculous by kiddailey · · Score: 1

      Exactly.

  29. can you say... by 3seas · · Score: 1

    bait and switch....?

    1. Re:can you say... by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I suggest that people monitor the following site:

      http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/promises/

      It gives a good overall view of whether it is 'bait and switch' or not.

      So far the meter shows 15 promises kept and 2 broken. That is almost close to 90%. I'd say that is a pretty good score.

    2. Re:can you say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That site doesn't even mention all his broken promises about transparency and such.

    3. Re:can you say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I promise never to rape anyone.

      I promise never to kill anyone.

      I promise never to steal ID.

      I promise never to beat up a child.

      So, if I keep the first two, do I get credit for 50%?

      "Ethical and transparent," he promised.

      Oh, and smaller budget and massive government services.

      If you voted for Zero, if you still believe he gives a shit about you, you just need your face smashed in with a ball bat.

      He never promised he wouldn't do that, though. So it's not a violation of his campaign, right?

    4. Re:can you say... by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 0

      That site doesn't even mention all his broken promises about transparency and such.

      Crikey did you even look at it? One of the broken promises listed had to do with transparency.

      In actuality Obama has a pretty good record of transparency. For example one of the first things he did in office is lift the executive order from Ashcroft that set a policy of contesting all FOIA requests. His legislative record as a senator is really good in this area too.

      As far as this lawsuit goes there is so little information in the AP story we have no idea what is going on except some knee-jerk reaction.

    5. Re:can you say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I promise never to rape anyone.
      I promise never to kill anyone.
      I promise never to steal ID.
      I promise never to beat up a child.
      So, if I keep the first two, do I get credit for 50%?

      50% of what? 50% of time you don't commit felonies?

      "Ethical and transparent," he promised.

      Yes. Did we have another candidate that made such promises? When is the last time you saw even the smallest progress in that direction?

      If you voted for Zero, if you still believe he gives a shit about you, you just need your face smashed in with a ball bat.

      I guess I don't have that level of cynicism. Perhaps it is because of a time that I wrote to a current President of the United States about a problem I was having with a government agency, and I got a response from that enabled my wife and I to live in this country in peace. So yes, I expect such people actually do give a shit, because I have seen it happen, to me and my family on the most personal basis possible.

      It is a shame so many people are so bitter and disillusioned. And just plain out and out stupid.

    6. Re:can you say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Crikey did you even look at it? One of the broken promises listed had to do with transparency.

      http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/promises/rulings/promise-broken/

      Which one are you talking about? The 5 day waiting period? Pfft... that's not about transparancy.

      What about his promise that he wouldn't continue Bush's abuse of the state secrets privilege? Because he has ignored that.

    7. Re:can you say... by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 2, Informative

      Which one are you talking about? The 5 day waiting period? Pfft... that's not about transparancy.

      According to a wide variety of other commentators it certainly is.

      http://www.propublica.org/article/take-two-obama-short-on-transparency-pledge-again-090205

      What about his promise that he wouldn't continue Bush's abuse of the state secrets privilege? Because he has ignored that.

      I would not exactly say he ignored it. For example in his first day in office he implemented a roll back of an important Bush secrecy directive which was clearly an abuse of exactly what you are talking about, the state secret privilege.

      http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2009/jan/22/obama-lifts-bushs-veil-of-secrecy/

      There has been a roll-back of the Bush position in many cases, however in a few high profile cases he has continued the Bush policy. Speculation is that in some cases he is following the Bush policy because releasing documents would then compel prosecutions of former Bush officials - something he has stated he doesn't want.

      Personally I think judgement on this will have to wait a bit for the overall picture to emerge.

  30. Re:It's government corruption by Runaway1956 · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    Believe everything in a book? No. But, how about the newspapers? In the days immediately after the World Trade Center collapsed - how many planes were in the skies, departing America? And, who was aboard that plane? The Bush and Saud families are indeed much to cozy, and questions beg to be asked.

    --
    "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
  31. Worth reading-Empire by Orson Scott Card by CrankinOut · · Score: 1
    I've just finished reading this novel. The interesting theme that Card points out is that intensive partisanship is a destructive force. In an even more interesting afterword, Card identifies himself as a recipient of both radical and reactionary ostracism as a tendency away from moderation and idiological tolerance.

    My personal opinion is that the world has more serious issues to deal with than a witchhunt into the past. I'd rather the new administration be forward-looking, constructive, and collaborative instead of backward-focused, destructive, and contentious. Difficult times call for solving present problems in the future, not solving past problems in the present. The election did the latter.

    1. Re:Worth reading-Empire by Orson Scott Card by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      I've just finished reading this novel. The interesting theme that Card points out is that intensive partisanship is a destructive force. In an even more interesting afterword, Card identifies himself as a recipient of both radical and reactionary ostracism as a tendency away from moderation and idiological tolerance.

      My personal opinion is that the world has more serious issues to deal with than a witchhunt into the past. I'd rather the new administration be forward-looking, constructive, and collaborative instead of backward-focused, destructive, and contentious. Difficult times call for solving present problems in the future, not solving past problems in the present. The election did the latter.

      Nice sounding words, but the reality is that if Obama doesn't deal with this effectively now, it will continue to happen. A focus on the past is a good part of what politics is about, because that's how we know what worked ... and what did not. And what George Bush did, generally didn't.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    2. Re:Worth reading-Empire by Orson Scott Card by CrankinOut · · Score: 1
      Thanks for the compliment!

      If such problems continue to happen, then President Obama's administration is the one doing it, and where's the "Change" in that?

      (P.S. I dislike the phrase "the reality is..." because that implies there is a reality beyond an individual or group's perception, when all each of us has access to is our own perceptions. Some of the world's greatest advances have come when someone ignores the perceived present "reality" and takes everyone to a new place. )

  32. Re:It's government corruption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    The screw will turn, my friend, and your party won't always be in power.

    That's the point: deterrent. If crimes were committed by the Bush administration then they need to be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law to send a strong message to the next Republican administration that the law must be obeyed.

    Then we'll see how much you like all the investigations.

    Bring it on. While I strongly believe that Obama is far better than the Republican alternative, I have no love for Obama either. If Obama breaks the law, punish him to the full extent.

  33. Read the books. They are VERY well-documented. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "It sounds to me like you believe everything written in a book"

    That sounds to me like the opinion of someone who doesn't read books, and didn't read the book mentioned in the grandparent comment, which is VERY well documented.

  34. Re:It's government corruption by Qrlx · · Score: 1

    Try replacing them with someone who has actually done productive work, not lawyers.

    As a matter of fact, the past half-century or so has seen an influx of non-lawyers into the legislature. The predictable result: Poorly written, unjust, often unconstitutional laws. Sonny Bono Copyright Extension Act FTW.

    And you... you want more of this?

    Let's break it down: Lawyer. Legal. Legislature.

    Please consider thinking before you parrot your next ignorant truism.

    Be well,
    Qrlx

  35. How so? by khasim · · Score: 4, Interesting

    That anonymity, a form of secrecy is necessary for honest communications.

    How so? Particularly with regard to government operations.

    If the President cannot communicate honestly, then he cannot do his job.

    And yet you have not established that secrecy is a necessity for honesty.

    But I can give you MANY examples of secrecy being a necessity for DISHONESTY.

    Imagine if LBJ's tapes had been made public during his administration. Do you want to throw away the Civil Right's act because he's also tailing MLK?

    Why would that be necessary?

    Let the public decisions an administration makes stand for themselves, right wing or left wing, and don't let yourself get trapped up needing to see every frank discussion that takes place behind the scenes.

    And that makes sense as long as you agree with every decision made.

    Fuck that.

    This is our elected government. Not our king.

    This is a Republic, not a Democracy, and you need to let leaders lead. If you don't like the way they lead, then run for office yourself.

    So I can vote for someone ... who then becomes unquestionable.

    Fuck that, too.

    They're elected officials. This is not an autocracy.

  36. Have you ever had a job? by khasim · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Who would have to do the work hunting down the "missing" emails?

    Someone appointed/hired by Obama's administration.

    If the task falls to Obama's staff who weren't even there during the whole Bush thing, then I can't really blame him.

    If you were hired in the civilian sector and one of the things you sold yourself on to your new boss was your belief in email recovery, wouldn't you expect to be asked to do just that?

    If you took on a new job, would you like to be told that rather than focus on the tasks that they were hired to do, instead your staff was going to have to digging around through your predecessors crap to try to find something that may or may not be there?

    Get a job in IT. That's what I have to go through ALL THE TIME.

    What decisions were made.

    Why were those specific decisions made.

    How were they implemented.

    Why were they implemented in that specific way.

    And yes, a LOT of it DOES involve going through my predecessor's email and notes.

    If I am hired to recover the email, I work on recovering the email. Even if I have to recommend bringing in a recovery specialist. There are 300 million people in the USofA. It shouldn't be that difficult to find a few people to handle this. Instead, he's arguing against even TRYING.

    1. Re:Have you ever had a job? by twotailakitsune · · Score: 0, Troll

      Obama's staff is on a budged. The more people he hires, the more he needs to ask the RIAA for money. Lucky for him, he got some RIAA people working with him.

  37. In other news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "The AP reports that the Obama administration has picked up where the Bush administration left off on the missing White House email issue..."

    The White House is missing? Someone sent an email about it?

  38. A Republic is Thus. by tjstork · · Score: 1, Interesting

    So I can vote for someone ... who then becomes unquestionable.

    That's a Republic, exactly that. You vote for the best and brightest to run the country within the allowed scope of their powers for some limited term, and they can do whatever they want, without harassment. Yeah, that is exactly what a Republic is.

    What you are after is a genuine Democracy, where, steps towards giving the public all the information they want leads to some sort of a national voting on every issue. Dude, that's crazy. Mob rule is pretty stupid...

    Just let the damn President and the elected officials do their job. In a Republic, they are elected with their powers to some extent take a bunch of shit from the mob during the daily grind in order to protect the rights of the minority. If there's a bit of a backroom give and take needed to make the system tick.

    Ever since we have had all of these subpoenas and inquests into the Presidency, the country has had nothing but political infighting and a rather sharp decline. I mean, what has all of this conflict accomplished? Not a damn thing, but national ruin and a bunch of finger pointing and blogs dredging up email.

    I'd say, take all the leaders of all the corporations, all the governors and mayors and senators and congressman, and the president, and lock these assholes into a room, throw away the tape recorders and transcribers and let them not come out until they have a real plan for economic recovery. Right now, there's just too many damned lawyers involved for anyone to communicate honestly and honesty is what is needed.

    Republics work.

    --
    This is my sig.
    1. Re:A Republic is Thus. by iminplaya · · Score: 0

      Republics work.

      Where? Rome?

      --
      What?
    2. Re:A Republic is Thus. by tjstork · · Score: 1

      Republics work? Where? Rome?

      Hey, 2000 years later, we're still talking about them. So, obviously that answer is YES. And indeed, the Constitution was defined by Madison to correct some of the flaws that lead to the Roman drive to Empire.

      --
      This is my sig.
    3. Re:A Republic is Thus. by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      ...the Constitution was defined by Madison to correct some of the flaws that lead to the Roman drive to Empire.

      Doesn't seem to have worked as we follow our "manifest destiny"

      --
      What?
    4. Re:A Republic is Thus. by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      ...and they can do whatever they want, without harassment.

      That's exactly the kind of thing that got us into this second quagmire in less than 40 years. Sometimes, and this would be one of them, the majority is wrong. Winning an election does necessarily mean you are qualified for the job. It just means you're a good salesman and you won. The campaign is not the job. The majority continues to vote for those who allegiances are very questionable, either because they are misinformed or are just as greedy for a piece of the action, and the minority has to fight back with a bit more vigor. We might not win an election, but we sure as hell won't just let these people "do whatever they want, without harassment". The last eight years should be glaringly obvious as to why not. With government, openess and honesty go hand in hand, and I for one, will demand both.

      --
      What?
    5. Re:A Republic is Thus. by Ian+Alexander · · Score: 1

      But we're only still talking about them because they threw their republic into the gutter, became a military dictatorship and built an empire.

    6. Re:A Republic is Thus. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      And hundreds of millions of years later, we're still talking about dinosaurs--so clearly their model of anarchy worked.

      Oh, I'm sorry--was that form of argument irreparably flawed? Next time you pick an example of something that "obviously worked" -- you might at least start with an example that isn't currently being pieced together by archaeologists.

    7. Re:A Republic is Thus. by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      Republics work.

      Where? Rome?

      Yes, that's actually a very good example of a republic that worked. The ancient Romans maintained a very high civilization that lasted a hell of a lot longer than we've been around, and way longer than we're likely to. So yes, Republics can work, can work very well, but like all edifices built by the hand of Man they don't last forever.

      Nothing does. Even the Great Pyramid will be dust one day.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    8. Re:A Republic is Thus. by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      ...like all edifices built by the hand of Man they don't last forever.

      But they will last as long as they are maintained. If this republic fails, there should be no doubt it will be for the same reasons Rome's did. Funny thing, in many ways the Roman Empire is still alive and well, headquartered in the Vatican, as rich and powerful as it has ever been, having much influence over many governments all over the world, including the US.

      --
      What?
    9. Re:A Republic is Thus. by Dude23 · · Score: 1

      I don't want to "just let the damn President and elected officials do their job." This is the whole problem. They do "their" job alright and completely ignore doing "our" job. Also, whoever said that the government is meant to protect the rights of the minority? That is completely wrong. The government is not there to protect anyone's rights. The rights of the people are there to restrict what the government can and can not do. So it is the people who are there to restrict the government. The government is only meant to operate in a limited scope restricted by the Constitution. I really hate when people interpret the purpose of government as protecting one group from another. The only place where this applies is in the case of national security where the military is a tool to protect the people from foreign invasion (can we all say 20 million illegal aliens), in which case the Government has failed miserably. So, at this point the Government has failed miserably in every aspect of its intended purpose and in my opinion is no longer a viable Government of which the people ought to tolerate anymore. As far as a real plan for economic recovery, they have had one for a long time already. The plan is to take all our money, our land, and turn America into a 3rd world nation. We are already at 2nd world status, yet, most Americans don't even realize it. So the economic plan is what you see going on right now. Get used to the new economy because this is it. We are all going to more broke, with a lot less, struggling. That's the plan stan. As far as political infighting and the country in a mess I think the entire history of the US has had this going on. Civil War, Great Depression, etc. I can't think of anymore political infighting than half the states breaking away and starting a freaking civil war, then losing the war and being forced to join the union again. That is some pretty serious political infighting. And it might happen again. In our short history the people have failed to force the government to be restricted by the Constitution and operate within it, thus, we will continue to deteriorate and fight until such time the people ignore Walmart and Television and get on with forcing the Government to follow the rules. So I support all the subpoenas and inquests and infighting, since it is the only means we currently have of poking the Government back. The government is whacking us with a tree trunk and we are only poking it back with a twig. And as far as a real economic plan...get rid of the Federal Reserve corporation that charges interest on our own money, start the gold standard again and get rid of the inflationary tax.

  39. Re:It's government corruption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Believe everything in a book? No. But, how about the newspapers? In the days immediately after the World Trade Center collapsed - how many planes were in the skies, departing America? And, who was aboard that plane? The Bush and Saud families are indeed much to cozy, and questions beg to be asked.

    I'll bet Elvis was on there, too. And Jim Morrison.

  40. Re:openness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And Pakistan is doing so much better?

  41. My vote is for a Republic, and Harding by tjstork · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Liberals regard Warren G Harding as the worst President ever. He was the epitome of smoke filled room deals .. getting the Presidential nomination in one, and his own Presidency was just mired in scandal, from womanizing, conflicts of interests, and bribes. Were he around today, he'd be impeached a week after swearing the oath. But....

    During his administration, he cut taxes, deregulated, and also cut spending to match, and the economy boomed. Unemployment fell to a record 1.9%, a record which STILL stands.

    --
    This is my sig.
    1. Re:My vote is for a Republic, and Harding by residue · · Score: 1

      During his administration, he cut taxes, deregulated, and also cut spending to match, and the economy boomed. Unemployment fell to a record 1.9%, a record which STILL stands.

      And in 6 years, we had the Great Depression! Hm...

  42. What the .... ? by khasim · · Score: 4, Interesting

    So I can vote for someone ... who then becomes unquestionable.

    That's a Republic, exactly that.

    We are electing politicians. Not princes and kings.

    You vote for the best and brightest to run the country within the allowed scope of their powers for some limited term, and they can do whatever they want, without harassment.

    And now you're confusing oversight with "harassment".

    Just let the damn President and the elected officials do their job.

    Your "logic" is self contradictory.

    By your "logic".
    They were elected to do a job.
    Once they are elected, they can do whatever they want to do.
    And no matter what they are doing, the public must not bother them about what they are doing.
    Even if what they are doing is the opposite of what the people who voted for them asked them to do.

    Fuck that. Fuck princes and kings. I'm watching my elected officials. I'm watching what they're doing. If I don't approve, I let them know.

    You can keep your princes and kings.

    1. Re:What the .... ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      The real question is: can you make your argument stick without dropping the F-bomb?

      Now, I am not against the word "fuck" and in fact I am one of the first people to use it when necessary.  You, however, sprinkle it into your argument like salt on fried food, which makes you look like an idiot who can't respond to an opposing view without saying "fuck that!"

      In other words:  Your tactics aren't changing any minds.  They just make sure that your argument is dismissed.

      I just thought you should know.  Have a nice day.

    2. Re:What the .... ? by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      You have little idea about the government or how it works, don't you.

      A representative is responsible to his office he holds, the people control electing him in or electing others in and his office is over the people as well as everything that effects the people. It doesn't make a prince or a king when a representative, be it a congressman, the president, the local governor or whatever acts independent of the people. It's precisely why the form of government is the way it is. If you don't like that, then say so but don't exaggerate and call them something they are not just because you are confused. And if you want to change it, either get a constitutional amendment going or start a revolt and install your own government.

      The parent explained things pretty accurately and your inability to accept that is your problem, not a problem with the system or the op. The system has been in place for over 220 years in this country and your just now objecting to it.

    3. Re:What the .... ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fuck princes and kings.

      I'd love to, can you set me up?

    4. Re:What the .... ? by Golddess · · Score: 1

      The system has been in place for over 220 years in this country and your just now objecting to it.

      GP is over 220 years old? :o

      But seriously, just because a system is old that doesn't mean we don't have the right to object to it. That's just nonsense.

      And please don't take this in any context other than exactly what it says. I'm neither agreeing or disagreeing with this whole royalty vs elected officials discussion. Merely pointing out that, just because someone was born 200+ years after something was put into place, that doesn't mean they don't have the right to object to it.

      --
      "I'm not sure I like the fugnutish tone you used in your post!" -RogL (608926)-
    5. Re:What the .... ? by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      But seriously, just because a system is old that doesn't mean we don't have the right to object to it. That's just nonsense.

      He can object to it all he wants. Hell, for that matter, he can even work toward changing the system for all I care. What he can't do is take something that is pretty much identical to how it was when it was created over 200 years ago and pretend it is something else because he hasn't invested the time or energy to learn about the damn thing in the first place. His free speech and freedom to be ignorant doesn't take away my free speech and freedom to correct him. Especially when he shows off that ignorance in a public place to which I am a part of.

      And please don't take this in any context other than exactly what it says. I'm neither agreeing or disagreeing with this whole royalty vs elected officials discussion. Merely pointing out that, just because someone was born 200+ years after something was put into place, that doesn't mean they don't have the right to object to it.

      Don't make the mistake of assuming his right to object to something overrides my right to object to his objections or to point out inaccuracies in his claim or to simply defend what he objects to. One person's right does not take another person's away. We have political "free speech zones" because too many people can't grasp the concept of all the people having the same rights and they want to impose their rights over others. Your right to protest or speech or religion or anything doesn't detract from my rights to do the same at all. Even if I am the government, I enjoy the exact same rights.

      BTW,
      The comment about the length of time was more to show how wrong he was in the interpretation of Princes and Kings. He is probably the first person to ever relate to the sitting government in that way. Certainly the first person in over 200 years to do it publicly and in a way to draw my attention. Anyways, it 300 million people before you didn't see it that way, then chances are, that way is completely wrong. I'm not sure how you got the idea that I was attempting to say "it's been that way for 200 years so don't complain about it", but I really meant it as, no one else sees it that way, it's a sign that your way is wrong. It's like railing the 2+2 is 5 when everyone else says it's 4, then going about saying fuck that because he doesn't like 5 as the answer.

    6. Re:What the .... ? by Golddess · · Score: 1

      I see. Thank you for clarifying that.

      I'd also like to apologize for my message about context. I wasn't trying to say that you don't have the right to object to khasim's views, I was merely trying to state that, just because I was pointing out that you seemed to imply that khasim would need to be 220 in order to have the right to object to the way the government works, I was not siding with khasim. Which again, thank you for clarifying what you meant with that statement.

      --
      "I'm not sure I like the fugnutish tone you used in your post!" -RogL (608926)-
    7. Re:What the .... ? by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Perhaps I could have been more clear in my original presentation. Most of the time, when people take things the wrong way, I find it is because the original statement was not as clear as it should have been. I knew what I was talking about but it doesn't necessarily mean you or anyone else would have.

      Anyways, we got that resolved and I look forward to reading your comments in the future. Had I actually said what you thought I did, your reply would have been spot on so don't take anything we discussed in a way that stops you from posting and participating.

  43. Time to end this thread. by khasim · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Republics work? Where? Rome?

    Hey, 2000 years later, we're still talking about them. So, obviously that answer is YES.

    2000 years from now we'll probably still be talking about Nazi Germany. So your "obviously" is 100% wrong.

    Simply being a subject of discussion does NOT mean anything beyond being a subject of discussion.

    Once again, you are wrong.

    1. Re:Time to end this thread. by baKanale · · Score: 1

      2000 years from now we'll probably still be talking about Nazi Germany. So your "obviously" is 100% wrong.

      The Roman Republic lasted from 508 BC to 27 BC (181 years), and the Roman Empire from 27 BC to AD 476 (503 years), for a total of 684 years, setting the foundation for much of Western civilization.

      On the other hand, Nazi Germany existed from 1933 until 1945, a mere 12 years by comparison, and it's main action was pissing off enough people to get itself exterminated. Precluding the emergence of a Fourth Reich inspired by the Third, or a similar resurgence in Neo-Nazi beliefs, in 2000 years the Nazis will likely be a comparative footnote in history, mentioned only in limited discussions about the 20th Century.

      Simply being a subject of discussion does NOT mean anything beyond being a subject of discussion.

      However, I agree with this. In historical discussion we talk about the Roman Empire (where the pretenses of a republic were just that, pretenses), about the Pharaohs of Egypt, and of age of monarchies in Europe, but it doesn't mean any of those things were good ideas. Nobody's saying we should hand our government over to a bunch of hereditary autarchs who claim their right to rule comes from "a higher power".

    2. Re:Time to end this thread. by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      Nobody's saying we should hand our government over to a bunch of hereditary autarchs who claim their right to rule comes from "a higher power".

      All I'm saying is that there's nothing wrong with hanging the Sword of Damocles over their heads either. Maybe that way they will have less desire to make the job a career. Being president should not be a job to aspire towards. It should be seen as an obligation of public service. I bet you the person who wants it the least would be your best candidate.

      --
      What?
    3. Re:Time to end this thread. by tjstork · · Score: 2, Funny

      Being president should not be a job to aspire towards

      My point is that you get the Presidents you pay for.

      --
      This is my sig.
    4. Re:Time to end this thread. by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      Couldn't agree more. It is we who put him there. And it is we who have the power to remove him. And if he wants to work in secret, I will always recommend that we do just that. I will always consider the last 45 years, and in particular, the last 8 years to be our failure, not the politicians'. It is a perfect example of majority rule gone haywire. They are just following orders. Whose, I don't know. That's why we need to put them in glass houses.

      --
      What?
    5. Re:Time to end this thread. by tjstork · · Score: 1

      2000 years from now we'll probably still be talking about Nazi Germany

      Will we? Hitler doesn't get 2000 years of fame unless he would have conquered Russia too and at least introduced something of cultural use. Then, even if his empire were short lived, the sheer scale of it would have been impressive and the leaving of some sort of law would have left a legacy to consider positively.

      So, in the grand scheme of things, if you had to remember one conquering unifier of Europe, you would have to probably study Napolean more than Hitler because Napoleanic law still has some basis for the present French law, and Napolean was not only the head of state, but also a brilliant field general. Napolean won Austerlitz for himself, but Guderian won France for Hitler.

      --
      This is my sig.
    6. Re:Time to end this thread. by jamstar7 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      My point is that you get the Presidents the media feeds you.

      Fixed that for you. 'Modern politics' has become such a media circus, I'm surprised they haven't turned it into a reality show yet.

      Oh, wait...

      --
      Understanding the scope of the problem is the first step on the path to true panic.
    7. Re:Time to end this thread. by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1

      The Roman Republic lasted from 508 BC to 27 BC (181 years), and the Roman Empire from 27 BC to AD 476 (503 years), for a total of 684 years, setting the foundation for much of Western civilization.

      I think you typoed. 508 BC to 27 BC is not 181 years, but 481 years. You also picked the end date of the Western Roman Empire. Technically, the Roman Empire had ceased to exist as a single entity about a hundred years before that, having split in two, but this latter is a minor point. I just wanted to highlight the length of the Republic phase of Rome was nearly as long as the Empire phase. The circumstances might be considered different however, in that you had a lot of subject states forming part of the "Republic" that certainly weren't represented democratically. But yes, republics can and have worked.

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    8. Re:Time to end this thread. by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      The Eastern Roman Empire, which truly was the "Roman Empire" later on, lasted until 1453.

    9. Re:Time to end this thread. by baKanale · · Score: 1

      Thanks for catching my mistake. The "1" key is right below the "4" key, so I must have pressed it by mistake. At first, when I wrote that the Nazis were around for 12 years I made the opposite screwup, and when I reread it I questioned how Nazi Germany could have been around for 42 years! Either way, Rome's Republic and Imperial periods lasted for a total of 984 years, enhancing my initial point that the Romans are far more historically notable than the Nazis.

      Anyway, I do agree with you that republics, especially when coupled with democratic elections, can and do work. My point was more that equating the long term significance of Rome to that of Nazi Germany was fooling, and that Rome is significant for more than just their form of government (which I suppose is a silly point, since that seems to be their biggest lasting legacy).

    10. Re:Time to end this thread. by tjstork · · Score: 1

      Oh, wait...

      Presidential politics in America has been a media show since at least the time of Jackson.

      --
      This is my sig.
    11. Re:Time to end this thread. by Teancum · · Score: 1

      Taking your line of thought further, I don't know of any government in the world today that is seeking to emulate most of the actions of the Nazi government in Germany, or trying to duplicate their path to political power.... or at least those leaders who have publicly acknowledged an affinity to Hitler tend to be folks like Saddam Hussein (who actually preferred Stalin over Hitler) that aren't exactly role models either.

      On the other hand, the Roman Republic has been looked upon for millennia as the pinnacle of prosperity and wealth for human culture and civilization. Throughout most of European history (even the "Third Reich" that asserted descendancy from the Roman Empire) there have been repeated attempts to re-create the experience and restore the political and economic power that existed in Rome.

      The question that keeps getting asked is to wonder aloud regarding what caused the Roman Republic to finally collapse and give way to Empire, and further concern that even the Empire fell apart... not so much to invading armies of a stronger adversary but rather to internal rot and a political, economic, and military collapse of the whole system at its core.

      The concerns of the founders of the American Republic was that it would go through the same cycle, including a worry that it would eventually lead to "bread and circuses" and political leaders more concerned with short term political gains than resolving long term problems.

  44. Re:It's government corruption by obarthelemy · · Score: 1

    Well, thinking about it, lawyers do live in a very specific world: services industry, high income, mainly white... People with other backgrounds probably would have a different take on many things.

    PLus, I personnally see lawyers as a necessary evil, not as leaders with a vision and the guts+drive to make it happen.

    Leaders can hire lawyers. The reverse is, alas, not true.

    Did I *think* enough for you ?

    --
    The Cloud - because you don't care if your apps and data are up in the air.
  45. To quote The Who by Amazing+Quantum+Man · · Score: 1

    Meet your new boss... same as the old boss...

    --
    Fascism starts when the efficiency of the government becomes more important than the rights of the people.
  46. Hard or Soft fascism. That was the choice. by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I keep hearing about how Obama represents a "Mixed Bag".

    Whatever. The whole show keeps moving forward. Keep an eye out for the "Amero".

    And when the rocks start falling, people will be willing to follow this president to the shelters. Just remember, that barbed wire is for our protection. Don't be alarmed by the fact that it's facing inwards. I'm sure there will be a good rationalization for that.

    -FL

  47. Re:It's government corruption by Nursie · · Score: 1

    Sorry, but there are different qualifications needed for two different jobs.

    Just because I can write C doesn't mean I'm the world's best GUI designer. Just because someone speaks legalese doesn't mean they are going to make great laws.

    They may make well-written laws, but that doesn't make them good.

  48. No... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Corruption implies government officials breaking the law for money.

    A citizen purchasing a drug isn't an act of corruption, it's a crime.

    Polluting is only a crime when done in violation of one of our anti-pollution laws, and being a large per-capita polluter doesn't mean someone's bribing you to break a law.

    Being an arms dealer does not imply you're breaking the law or not doing your job in exchange for money.

    People can sell rifles or even automatic weapons and still not be corrupt. People can even produce nuclear weapons and not be corrupt. But a cop can't ignore someone selling cocaine for money and not be corrupt.

  49. Re:missing emails backups .. by viralMeme · · Score: 1

    "if an email is deleted before the backup process runs there will be no backup"

    Have they subpoenaed SMARTech Corporation for the backups for this email server which would have copies of any emails that passed through it. Backups are maintained (usually on tape) as part of routine maintenance, to be used in the event of a hardware failure. The tapes are rotated until they near end-of-life and then stored somewhere off-site. To claim there are no records is disingenuous in the extreme.

  50. making backups is a time waster .. by viralMeme · · Score: 1

    "Do you have any idea how much of a bitch it is to keep backups of gigabytes or terabytes of data constantly preserved and updated? How much time it takes to make an image and put it on tapes?"

    Use a tape carousel ...

    1. Re:making backups is a time waster .. by Aphoxema · · Score: 1

      Yeah, that really takes all the trouble out of it.

      --
      "Most people, I think, don't even know what a rootkit is, so why should they care about it?"
  51. SHOVE it in his face then. by unity100 · · Score: 1

    let him get ahold of those who he had appointed in those posts. often tail wants to behave differently from what head wants.

  52. Re:It's government corruption by BCW2 · · Score: 1

    Lets make sure they guarantee perpetual employment for themselves and their peers by writing every law so that a normal person has to hire a lawyer to translate it.
    Does anyone else see a conflict of interest here?

    The Constitution doesn't require a lawyer to translate it, only a bit of average High School education. See the point?

    --
    Professional Politicians are not the solution, they ARE the problem.
  53. Verdict Rendered in Record Time by weston · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Obama is showing hypocrisy in record time, he's barely been in a month.

    He has barely been in a month. And inside that month, I've heard more final-sounding verdicts on his presidency than in any new president's time in the last 16 years of following politics. He's just another politician. He doesn't care about privacy. Or the constitution. Or transparency. His talk of bipartisanship is empty. He doesn't understand economics. He's vindicated Bush by having any measure of continuity. He's responsible for the next terrorist attack. All in four weeks.

    I think in another 2-4 years, it'll be time to come to conclusions about these things. Not that there's anything wrong with asking questions now, but anybody who's somehow arrived at a *conclusion* about Obama's presidency this early in the game is jumping to them, not thinking them through.

    I also think it's worth pointing out that some of the things he's promised have tension between each other -- for example, bipartisanship and transparency regarding the previous administration (that might in fact be part of what's going on here, since the transparency policies regarding Obama's own administration seem promising so far). An unsubtle view would be that this tension between two principles always implies that a politician who has stated commitment to both is simply dissembling, but when you get down to the business of leadership, just like engineering, you're often (if not usually) working with tradeoffs between values that may each have their worthy points. Maybe I'm different from a lot of other voters, but I picked Obama precisely because I thought he seemed like he had the kind of mind that could navigate things this way, not because I thought he was a pure avatar of an ideology.

    So far, the only thing I'm solidly unhappy with is his FISA reversal (and that was a senate decision) and decision to federally fund international clinics that would use abortion as a family planning method. Everything else looks like he's considering tradeoffs.

  54. Re:Hard or Soft fascism. That was the choice. by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

    I keep hearing about how Obama represents a "Mixed Bag".

    Obama & Biden are more of a "salt and pepper" team, if you ask me.

    --
    The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
  55. Re:You don't get it,,,Tes, we do by symbolic · · Score: 1

    I'd argue that the whole point of finding them is to pursue and enforce a sense of accountability. If people that get into office are going to do any of the completely lame things that was done by the Bush administration they should be prepared to answer for it. Otherwise, it's a free-for-all.

  56. Re:This is a troll and a half. by iminplaya · · Score: 1

    If there was a genuine investigation of the last 8 years...

    I know perfectly well that that is why there will be no investigations. And yes the dems are just as responsible for the last eight year as anybody. The failure is indeed bipartisan. Again, our fault. We put them there and kept them there. And if we did the responsible thing by demanding an end to so much secrecy, we wouldn't having this "meltdown". But here we are with some people saying we should just them keep doing what we have been doing all along. Don't mistake me for any kind of democrat. I like them even less than the old republicans we use to have before Falwell showed up on the scene. And besides, both are nothing more than factions of the same party.

    --
    What?
  57. In a Republic, they are elected by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    Having said "This is a Republic, not a Democracy" I'll point out that in a republic the leaders are not necessarily elected. All that's needed for a republic to exist is that the head of state not be a monarch.

    I mean, what has all of this conflict accomplished?

    It shows the rest of the world that people can question their government and don't need to take thinks on "faith" or at the point of a gun.

    Falcon

  58. Re:This is a troll and a half. by tjstork · · Score: 1

    And besides, both are nothing more than factions of the same party.

    Sigh... you are right.

    I'm just angry and frustrated and the awful truth is that we elected these assholes because we wanted them. We all wanted our houses to go up in value and take the money and spend it. We all wanted poor people to own their own homes and we all know that the budget was a gimmick laden mess and the value of our real estate was a fraud. I'll give Obama credit for putting the wars and other expenses back onto the official budget so that we don't have "federal deficit, not counting the wars", a gimmick in its own right.

    I mean, if you really wanted to benefit the American working man, you'd cut off the flow of imports to put him to work while simultaneously supporting the unions so that rich people won't just pocket monopolistic profits. It's a system that worked pretty well for the USA before...

    I agree about Jerry Falwell, but I also think Reagan's decision to adopt free trade as part of his reform, and Clinton's decision to stick with it, is the real root cause of our present economic mess, and we will not fix it until we get rid of it.

    --
    This is my sig.
  59. Re:This is a troll and a half. by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    the real national crisis was a Fannie Mae house of cards that the American left created?

    Citation needed.

    If there was a genuine investigation of the last 8 years, half the Democrats in Congress ought to be executed.

    And half of the Republicans if you want to be that way.

    I promise any Republican that there will be no trials, only murders, for what these people have done to this country.

    So you want to be part of the problem?

    Falcon

  60. NO Change by wideBlueSkies · · Score: 1

    ..that we can believe in.

    --
    Huh?
  61. You have a point. by tjstork · · Score: 1

    Citation needed

    There's a lot out there. If you want to follow the WSJ, you can go there through the back issues, all the way back to when Fannie Mae, during the time of Clinton way back when, announced it would make a trillion dollars worth of home loans available due to some new fancy instrument. I remember hearing it in a bar and actually bought a round of drinks because I thought it was a great thing to put everyone into houses. I guess I still do, but damn the WSJ the very next day said it was a stupid idea, and have been saying it ever since.

    And half of the Republicans if you want to be that way.

    Yeah, well, you would be right. I mean, I remember Reagan promising that free trade would improve American companies and instead, over the last thirty years, it has utterly destroyed them. And Republicans still keep pushing that free trade button with every dictatorship to all we have left is our secretary of state heading off to China to go publicly beg for money. That's pathetic.

    And, really, its criminal, that a political party that waves the flag as much as Republicans do doesn't seem to remember that at least some of those stars and stripes are for the Americans who used to build the cars and trucks and computers and aircraft and guns and every other thing this country used to build.

    So you want to be part of the problem?

    Yeah I do. Lock and load! :-) Just kidding.

    --
    This is my sig.
    1. Re:You have a point. by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      the real national crisis was a Fannie Mae house of cards that the American left created?

      Citation needed

      There's a lot out there. If you want to follow the WSJ, you can go there through the back issues, all the way back to when Fannie Mae

      Both Democrats and Republicans supported Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

      And half of the Republicans if you want to be that way.

      Yeah, well, you would be right. I mean, I remember Reagan promising that free trade would improve American companies and instead, over the last thirty years, it has utterly destroyed them

      Thing is is Reagan didn't fully support free trade. For instance to protect Harley Davidson he imposed tariffs on Japanese motorcycles. He also imposed tariffs on Japanese electronics. Fact is is there has been no free trade in a long tyme. One way or another US businesses have used government to restrict trade.

      And Republicans still keep pushing that free trade button with every dictatorship to all we have left is our secretary of state heading off to China to go publicly beg for money. That's pathetic.

      Ah, something we agree on. One of the things that bothers me is that while Republicans use the rhetoric of free trade they don't really support it.

      So you want to be part of the problem?

      Yeah I do. Lock and load! :-) Just kidding.

      Perhaps I was a bit harsh. Maybe a thread from yesterday is affecting me more than I should let it. That discussion was also about free markets, trade, but no matter how much research I presented the other party only ridiculed it without backing up their own position. It seems too many want to ridicule a proposal without making their own, and I have to include myself there because I don't always make a proposition.

      Falcon

    2. Re:You have a point. by tjstork · · Score: 1

      It seems too many want to ridicule a proposal without making their own

      My proposal is that the USA should cut off free trade with nations that adopt mercantile policies. Hoarding of dollars and adopting import restrictions as done by asian countries is mercantile. We shouldn't be begging the Chinese for a loan. Rather, they should be spending those dollars for their people.

      On the other hand, I would like to see trade expanded between the USA, Canada, and the European Union, and I would even envision a common tax structure and currency to eliminate speculation and reduce tax shopping between those nations.

      --
      This is my sig.
    3. Re:You have a point. by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      My proposal is that the USA should cut off free trade with nations that adopt mercantile policies

      How are you using mercantile?

      We shouldn't be begging the Chinese for a loan.

      What "we"? If you mean the government, a good economic system may mean government spending more than it brings in taxes. And governments are frequently borrowing from each other.

      Rather, they should be spending those dollars for their people.

      The Chinese people are benefiting from trade. Up until the recession the average Chinese was seeing an improved living standard. A Chinese from a rural village could move to a big city and work saving their money. After a few year they could have enough saved to move back to the village and start their own business. While many people in the US would say the Chinese lived and worked in slave labor conditions, the same is true about US labor, especially in the past. My own family is a good example, my background is low income. Our mother, I have two sisters, taught us while we were growing up we could be almost anything we wanted to be as long as we were willing to work for it. Neither of our parents went to college, my dad enlisted in the US Air Force and retired from it while my mother worked her way through a 2 year technical school, while raising my sisters and I, to become a lab assistant in a hospital. All three of us went to college. My older sister became a nurse and my younger sister got her Masters in Taxation and now runs her own accounting business. Me, I started college with a major in Computer Engineering. Unfortunately that ended when I was hit while riding my bike after my classes one day. The accident, ha ha it was no accident as the driver who hit me caused other accidents because he didn't take care of his diabetes, left me with a disability which unless a break through in neurology happens before I die will be permanent. I survived a Traumatic Brain Injury, TBI. And I do mean survived, while in a coma the docs told my family it would be a miracle if I lived. It was no miracle, but something else entirely.

      On the other hand, I would like to see trade expanded between the USA, Canada, and the European Union

      If I recall right, one of the problems with TBIs is poor memory, Canada is the US's biggest trading partner. And Mexico is near the top as well.

      Falcon

    4. Re:You have a point. by tjstork · · Score: 1

      How are you using mercantile [onelook.com]?

      The hallmark of a mercantile nation is hoarding. One nation hoards the payments of another nation to attempt to gain a sort of a balance. I agree completely, this behavior is bad because ultimately money is only really beneficial when it is being spent... simply hanging onto it, as a mercantile nation does, doesn't do any good.
      A genuinely free trading nation would spend that money, in some way.

      So, if China were really trading fairly, she would be spending that money around the globe and those dollars would ultimately work their way back to the US economy. Instead, China hoards them, the very same mercantile way that Great Britain hoarded gold in the old days of the gold standard. It's a good position to put yourself in, to be sitting on a big stack of loot, but, ultimately, that wealth doesn't do too much when its just sitting in banks.

      It's interesting to note, that, those "New Deal" era reforms made by Roosevelt that were successful are those that tend to increase the velocity of money, require it to be spent. And those that are less successful are those that encourage hoarding.

      Obviously, all taxes are bad in some theoretical sense, but if you were going to tax -effectively-, and raise revenue to do what it is that governments do, then, the things to tax would be hoards. Capital Gains taxes are the -worst- form of taxes because they encourage hoarding. On the other hand, sales taxes are pretty terrible too because they discourage spending, and that ultimately lowers the velocity of money.

      --
      This is my sig.
    5. Re:You have a point. by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      The hallmark of a mercantile nation is hoarding.

      You're using "mercantile nation" differently than others do. For instance Dictionary.com says "2. engaged in trade or commerce: a mercantile nation."

      if China were really trading fairly

      China doesn't trade fairly, that I admit. If China wanted to trade fairly then they'd have to let the market set the price of yuan or the Chinese Renminbi. But instead the government does.

      she would be spending that money around the globe and those dollars would ultimately work their way back to the US economy.

      China does spend, er invest, that money throughout the world. For instance "China to invest in Brazil oil". China is one of the biggest investors in Africa. It's because of China that there hasn't been a solution in the Sudan before, but the Chinese are pushing for peace now.

      those "New Deal" era reforms made by Roosevelt that were successful

      Some economists believe FDRs reforms prolonged the Great Depression as I've said elsewhere. Here's what the Wall Street Journal has to say about "How Government Prolonged the Depression". The protectionist Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act, enacted in 1930, may of made it worse.

      Obviously, all taxes are bad in some theoretical sense, but if you were going to tax -effectively-, and raise revenue to do what it is that governments do, then, the things to tax would be hoards. Capital Gains taxes are the -worst- form of taxes because they encourage hoarding. On the other hand, sales taxes are pretty terrible too because they discourage spending, and that ultimately lowers the velocity of money.

      Depending on how you look at it taxing something but not another may be bad, or visa versa. Taxing investments drives money away from investments, and taxing spending drives money away from spending. However not enough people in the US invest enough, too many people have been living beyond their means since at least the 1990s. That stimulus package passed in early 2008, where rebates were mailed out to tax payers, failed because many people used it to pay off debt instead of spending it. If they had spent it though then they would of had more debt. Damn if I do and damn if I don't. About the only thing I can see working is to reduce government spending so taxes can be lowered if not eliminated. Reduce the size of government and use user fees for those things government does mean to provide, like roads.

      Falcon

  62. You're absolutely right...this needs to be changed by Overzeetop · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I suggest that, rather than taxing earned income, we exempt it and tax only unearned income.

    That way, the more you work the more money you keep. If you make $20,000 in retail, you get to keep all of it. If you make $250,000 being a stock broker, you keep it. If you sit around on your ass waiting cashing in capitol gains (which means you sold a stock and are taking money _out_ of the system), living off the teat of dividends (again, money which is _not_ being reinvested directly by the company) or interest, you pay a flat rate...say 20%.

    Businesses make up for the slack by paying a paltry 1-3% of gross receipts.

    Or are you trying to defend those who don't work for a living?

    I might note - and you'll no doubt agree as a fiscal conservative - that retirement is not a basic "right" guaranteed in the constitution. You should be careful not to rest on either taxing work (wages) or granting the undeserving a free ride (retirees who haven't saved enough) - as both hard work and paying your own way are planks in the Republican platform.

    --
    Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
  63. trade by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    if you really wanted to benefit the American working man, you'd cut off the flow of imports

    If you really wanted to help the working American then you would support free trade, not protectionism.

    It's a system that worked pretty well for the USA before...

    When was this? Certainly not when protectionists passed the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act which led to the Great Depression.

    I agree about Jerry Falwell, but I also think Reagan's decision to adopt free trade as part of his reform, and Clinton's decision to stick with it, is the real root cause of our present economic mess, and we will not fix it until we get rid of it.

    Perhaps you haven't heard yet but communism failed. Okay, so maybe you'll say you know that but will you also admit no president since World War 2 supported free trade? Not one, not Reagan, not Clinton, and certainly not Bush II.

    Falcon

    1. Re:trade by tjstork · · Score: 1

      When was this? Certainly not when protectionists passed

      Actually, protectionism in the USA worked extremely well in the period from 1820s up through the Wilson administration. In particular, study how much the South absolutely hated the North for imposing tariffs on British goods, at a time when the Brits really were the best in the world at manufacturing. But protectionism gave the north the industrial base with which it needed to win the civil war, crush opposition to slave labor and free trade, both of which create a bigger demand for manufactured goods that the north happened to make.

      Protectionism also worked really well for the British too. They locked out foreign manufacturers and built themselves a nice little empire. The problem with protectionism is that it leads to empire building - and the British were really the best at it. They wound up locking out the rest of Europe from access to raw materials and world markets. That triggered, well, World War I, when Germany wanted the same access, as did Japan. It was the USA that imposed free trade postwar, and a decolonialization, largely to prevent another all out industrial war and that policy has been stunningly successful.

      In short, protectionism does work really well, but ultimately, it can cause wars if countries perceive that they are being starved of raw materials.

      --
      This is my sig.
    2. Re:trade by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      Actually, protectionism in the USA worked extremely well in the period from 1820s up through the Wilson administration.

      Okay, I learned something today, there was protectionism in the US in the 1820s.

      In short, protectionism does work really well, but ultimately, it can cause wars if countries perceive that they are being starved of raw materials.

      Protectionism works well for some but not all. However I believe free trade can raise more people's standard of living than protectionism does. The years since World War II shows this. Though there isn't true free trade international trade has opened up since the war and though there's a larger population less people are at or below the poverty line.

      Falcon

  64. Breaking news! by Oktober+Sunset · · Score: 1

    US president promises change, turns out to be a douche just like the last one! more at 11.

    1. Re:Breaking news! by Dude23 · · Score: 1

      You got that headline right, except I would have put it like this; Illegitimate US president promises change, turns out to be more of a douche than the last one!

  65. Re:It's government corruption by davester666 · · Score: 1

    This sounds like more a continuation of the policy "the current president will do all he can to defend previous administrations from any and all legal action [for the primary example, see Nixon being preemptively pardoned].

    It may not be his current policy, but I'll bet he was told he's got to defend the last guy's policy from any legal challenges. Otherwise, every time the White House changed party hands, the previous president would be up Shit Creek.

    --
    Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
  66. Re:This is a troll and a half. by buswolley · · Score: 1

    Your message is one of hate. Go back. Leave alone. Pray some.

    --

    A Good Troll is better than a Bad Human.

  67. New boss - same as the old boss by gabrieltss · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Here we go again... Just another lie! Where is the transperency he promised? He made A LOT of promises and hasn't kept ONE yet.... The global elite really are pulling this guys strings worse than Bush....

    Can one of the Obaaaaaamanoids tell us ONE promise he made he has kept????

    This is starting to remind me of the Ministry song "Lies, Lies, Lies"..

    "America has been hijacked
    Not by Al Qaeda, not by Bin Laden
    But by a group of tyrants
    That should be of great concern to all Americans

    We're on a mission to bring out the facts
    You got your stories but they all have cracks
    Misinformation, lies and deceit
    What made you think that we were all asleep
    Lies Lies Lies Lies Lies Lies Lies X3
    Surpise surprise"

    --
    The Truth is a Virus!!!
    1. Re:New boss - same as the old boss by mea37 · · Score: 1

      "tell us ONE promise he made he has kept????"

      Take your pick.

    2. Re:New boss - same as the old boss by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      Here we go again... Just another lie! Where is the transperency he promised? He made A LOT of promises and hasn't kept ONE yet.... The global elite really are pulling this guys strings worse than Bush.

      Question: were you this outraged when Bush was committing these abuses in the first place? Or are you engaging in Republican ethics, like in 1992 when Clinton's lack of military service was a huge issue when he was running against George H.W. Bush, but became irrelevant when George W. Bush was running against McCain and then Gore?

    3. Re:New boss - same as the old boss by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He hasn't kept ANY of those! This place doesn't have their facts straight!

    4. Re:New boss - same as the old boss by gabrieltss · · Score: 1

      In fact yes I was. BOTH the Democrats and Republicans are just puppets of the global elite and the bankers. You can't tell the two parties apart anymore. Obama is just picking up where Geroge Bush left off. He is still going to use the illigal powers Bush took under Presidential Directive 51 and the John Warner Defense Authorization Act, the Patriot Act, the new FISA bill. And don't give me the BS of "just give him time." He has already stated he will continue the use of kidnapping people and sending them off to secret interrigation camps. If Obama would only stand up and be a President OF THE PEOPLE and not the global elite and the bankers we would stand a fighting chance.

      See:

      The Obama Deception

      coming march 15th

      Trailer

      infowars

      prisonplanet

      --
      The Truth is a Virus!!!
    5. Re:New boss - same as the old boss by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      In fact yes I was.

      Given your statement that Obama's string's are being pulled worse than Bush's, I'm skeptical.

      You can't tell the two parties apart anymore.

      Really? Which Republicans are pushing for prosecutions of tortures exactly, like Pelosi and Sheldon Whitehorse are in the House and the Senate? Which Republicans tried to filibuster telecom immunity in the Senate, like Dodd and Feingold did?

      He has already stated he will continue the use of kidnapping people and sending them off to secret interrigation camps. If Obama would only stand up and be a President OF THE PEOPLE and not the global elite and the bankers we would stand a fighting chance.

      Which is why we need investigations of the Bushco regieme. The more we know about their dirty laundry, the harder it will be for new administrations (including Obama's) to continue those abuses. The more we know, the harder it will be to keep ignoring high officials that violated the law.

      But guess who's pushing for those investigations? Democrats.

    6. Re:New boss - same as the old boss by gabrieltss · · Score: 1

      Democrats are doing nothing of the sort! Neither are Republicans. They are BOTH in cahoots. Pelosi is the one who said there would be NO impeachments of Bush or Cheney. Hello? If they did that would have meant war crimes trials - which SHOULD HAVE HAPPENED. Heck Obama voted for the new FISA bill without a bitch. At least Feingold voted no, why didn't Obama - oh yeah! He was running for King errr.. President. Who exactly is calling for ANY kind of investigation? Is it picking up ANY support? Bush and Cheney should have been impeached, charged with TREASON, MURDER, CORRUPTION (along with Rumsfeld and Rice) and sentanced to death for their acts. BTW> I'm an independent I REFUSE to associate with being a Democrat or Republican - both are repugnant!

      I'm fully behind ALL the states passing bills taking back their States Rights based on the 9th and 10th Amendments! I think it's high time we gave the federal government the big old middle finger! 90% of what they are doing right violates their constitutional mandates. The states gave the federal government their power and now they are poising to TAKE IT AWAY! GOOD FOR THEM!

      --
      The Truth is a Virus!!!
    7. Re:New boss - same as the old boss by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      Democrats are doing nothing of the sort! Neither are Republicans.

      Sorry, but reality trumps your desire to maintain false equivalencies.

      Pelosi is the one who said there would be NO impeachments of Bush or Cheney.

      Yes, and she should be tossed out of the House for violating her oath of office (protect the Constitution). But that does not change the fact that other Democrats, like Dennis Kucinich, have moved to impeach Bush and Cheney. No doubt, there are many crappy Democrats that should be primaries (i.e. Joe Lieberman) but it's a simple fact that there are also many Democrats calling for investigations to zero Republicans.

      Who exactly is calling for ANY kind of investigation?

      Not my fault you don't read the news. Google for recent articles on Patrick Leahy, Sheldon Whitehouse, Henry Waxman or John Conyers.

      Is it picking up ANY support?

      There's only three groups of people opposed to investigations of Bush's lawbreaking:

      Idiot pundits that whine about national security or how investigations wont be "bipartisan".
      Republicans looking to cover their parties ass.
      Complicit Democrats (i.e. Rockefellar) looking to cover their own asses.

      I'm an independent I REFUSE to associate with being a Democrat or Republican - both are repugnant!

      Unfortunately for you, if there is any accountability for Buscho, it will come from Democrats, NOT independents. Either push for more and better Democrats, or sit in the corner next to Nader and be irrelevant.

    8. Re:New boss - same as the old boss by gabrieltss · · Score: 1

      Ron Paul has MUCH more sense than nader EVER will! And more sense than any of the boneheads on Capitol Hill now.

      --
      The Truth is a Virus!!!
    9. Re:New boss - same as the old boss by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      Sorry, but Ron Paul's anti-government libertarianism is completely counter-intuitive when massive government action is required. Like it is right now, on our economy, on health care, and on the environment.

      And then there's the uncomfortable fact that Ron Paul is one of the libertarians who believe that the Federal government has no authority to enforce the Bill of Rights on the states. He introduced the We the People Act, which would strip federal courts of the ability to hear first amendment cases. So in other words, if your state mandates school prayer or states that only marriages performed by Southern Baptists will be recognized, you're shit out of luck.

  68. Lynching Bush Administration worthless to Obama... by californication · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Lynching Bush Administration worthless to Obama right now. Wait until 2010-2011, THEN let the dirt start to be dug up about Bush & Co. When the public finds out it was much worse than we though, it will hurt the Republicans that much more. Welcome to politics.

  69. Re:It's government corruption by Atlantis-Rising · · Score: 1

    Your average person with a high school education can't read the constitution for beans. At least, not in the way you would expect.

    For example, a mere glance at the first two amendments indicates they're unclear:

    "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances."

    What exactly is meant by freedom of speech there? Why? If the government can't make a law abridging the freedom of speech, then how about the freedom to write? What constitutes the freedom of the press?

    For that matter, how many people know what a prefatory clause is, let alone how to interpret it and its relevance to the following badly-constructed statement?

    "A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed."

    --
    "It is possible to commit no errors and still lose. That is not a weakness. That is life." -Peak Performance
  70. Re:You're absolutely right...this needs to be chan by jackbird · · Score: 2, Interesting
    The earned/unearned income distinction is silly, and has been addressed at length elsewhere, but the concept of a gross receipts tax for businesses is terrible. It puts a disproportionate pressure on low margin businesses (like supermarkets), kicks businesses that lose money for the year in the groin (especially small startups and freelancers), and says nothing useful about how to tax anything in the financial sector (just what are a bank's 'gross receipts'? If it's the total amount deposited, a bank could be bankrupted by a someone repeatedly depositing and withdrawing the same funds.)

    I live and operate a small business in a municipality with a gross receipts tax, and it blows as both a business owner and as a consumer.

  71. Only on slashdot... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    can a bland comment demanding greater transparency get modded +5 insightful. Your comment is not insightful, its just the slashdot norm. The truth is, there is plenty of transparency. Allot of people know about allot of bad stuff happening in the government (try watching the Daily Show on hulu). Sure, we may not know it all, but we can't even correct the things we _do_ know about.

    The real battle right now is to clean things up that we know need cleaning. IMHO, the future of this country will be far better served if Obama spends time putting in rock solid data retention policies for his and future administrations, then it would be served by spending time digging through the mess that was George W.

    1. Re:Only on slashdot... by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      Feel free to state something more exciting whenever you're up to it.

      IMHO, the future of this country will be far better served if Obama spends time putting in rock solid data retention policies for his and future administrations, then it would be served by spending time digging through the mess that was George W.

      I would like to go along with that, but it is necessary to send a message that the next "George W" (and there will be one, if we really don't already have one) won't get away with it. Kinda what justice is about. This George W was able to do what he did because Nixon walked away scott free, with full bennies. Let's see if we can't prevent a third occurrence during my lifetime.

      Oh, and Hulu doesn't work here. That's another bit of openness we need to demand. This proxy thing is a pain in the ass.

      You know, for those of us who lived through Johnson and Nixon, some of us find all this secrecy is just another example of our failure to learn from the past, especially such a recent past. To put it nicely, fuck that.

      --
      What?
    2. Re:Only on slashdot... by sumdumass · · Score: 0, Troll

      G.W, didn't need to rely on Nixon or Johnson. He got away with what a lot happened because of incompetence leading to technical problems. This is especially true with the missing emails. The white house supposedly archived the PST files containing the emails because the firm that convinced them switching to Exchange was going to be more productive couldn't extract the emails and sort them and they couldn't get the email archive on line. Something like three years past with nothing but nightly backups of PST files for email retention and the email retention system once working was totally indelicate for the purpose of retrieving the previous emails.

      What ended up happening is that each days PST file had to be opened and searched and often restored from backup for any information needed for each computer that might have been used with the accounts. Then some of the tapes came up missing and bla bla bla, we have what we have right now. Now this change over was actually commisioned under Clinton because the old email system was outgrown and being patched together but it was clear that it wouldn't last. If they switched to something like a Sendmail or Postfix Email server the email would have been on index-able plain text files that could easily have been rolled into a simple relational database capable of filling in the retention needs. Instead, a propriatary format was used and we have what we see today.

    3. Re:Only on slashdot... by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      Yeah, that's one of the things I never could understand is how we let email get stuffed into some archive that only the program that created it can read. Dumb as hell. At worst, it should use a standard zip archive with the text files like you mentioned inside. Anyway, I was kinda talking more about secrecy in general, the stuff we fought against during Nixon's term. He proved that crime does pay, and quite well. And the subsequent people have learned from his mistake of not burning the tapes. and the voters have learned absolutely nothing from these sordid episodes. So, while the country "heals", criminals roam free, and another one will probably be elected president again. Shame on us for putting up with it.

      --
      What?
  72. Re:It's government corruption by Teun · · Score: 1

    Otherwise, every time the White House changed party hands, the previous president would be up Shit Creek.

    You're too cynical, in this case it's only those that were in the wrong lane to begin with that would end up Shit Creek.

    --
    "The likes of Facebook and WhatsApp are free to those whose privacy is of zero value."
  73. Re:It's government corruption by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    every time the White House changed party hands, the previous president would be up Shit Creek.

    That's how it should be, not just the White House, but all of government. Sunshine laws are good.

    Falcon

  74. PRIORITIES by westlake · · Score: 1
    I don't think people quite got what "YES WE CAN" really meant.

    It means choosing between what is urgent and essential and what is disruptive and peripheral.

    There is a banking crisis to be dealt with.

    Big decisions to be made about financial relief for state governments, home foreclosures. Unemployment Insurance. Health Care. Education. Infrastructure. There is a federal budget to be passed.

    There is Gitmo. Afghanistan.

    North Korea. China. The Middle East.

    The Bush administration is discredited and defunct. There is nothing to be gained by picking over the corpse.

  75. Re:This is a troll and a half. by Teun · · Score: 1

    Sigh... you are right.

    I'm just angry and frustrated and the awful truth is that we elected these assholes because we wanted them.

    As an outsider I'd suggest you have another look at your last statement.

    In my opinion the biggest enemy of the US democratic process is the financing of the elections.
    Put a limit of say $25.- p/a on any contribution a single -voter- can make and you'd be back at a level playing field.
    I hope you realise what I meant by -voter-, that does exclude anything/anyone that has no voting rights.

    Your present government was not elected by the people but by the money they got.

    --
    "The likes of Facebook and WhatsApp are free to those whose privacy is of zero value."
  76. Re:It's government corruption by westlake · · Score: 1
    Until everyone in Washington is replaced in 3 election cycles (for the whole Senate) there will be no change. Try replacing them with someone who has actually done productive work, not lawyers.

    This is another populist panacea and like term limits it is political nonsense.

    All it does is shift power to the Washington lobbyist and permanent committee staff - those with expert knowledge in the subject matter and decades of institutional experience in drafting legislation and guiding it through the Congress.

    When you are building a bridge you hire an engineer.

    When you are governing a country you need the politician and you need the lawyer. Social engineers by profession.

    The geek writes code that guides the actions of a machine.

    The Congressman writes laws that shapes the lives of 300 million people - including that of the geek himself, of course.

    Tell me why you want a pro on the one job and an amateur on the other. Why the geek is "productive" and the legislator is not.

  77. Re:Lynching Bush Administration worthless to Obama by steak · · Score: 1

    with any other president this would be true, but so far it seems like obama is still campaigning.

  78. Re:It's government corruption by Antique+Geekmeister · · Score: 0, Troll

    You've got it backwards. The current president is always somewhat at the mercy of the existing bureaucracy. Even if he fires all the department heads and replaces them with his own handpicked staff, it's impossible to replace the entire Supreme Court (with its Bush appointees) and the secondary leaders of the military forces, State department, SEC, Justice Department, and Treasury all in one step. But those people were mostly hired by Bush or his appointees (or by Dick Cheney and his contracting acquaintances), and they were taught to cooperate with all these nasty policies. I'm not suggesting that Mr. Obama shouldn't try to do a clean sweep and open up government: I'm saying that he's going to have one hell of a time with the entrenched bureaucrats and war criminals of the old Bush administration, and they're probably fighting him as much as they can on such policies.

  79. Those numbers are meaningless alone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What percentage of the total income goes to the top 20%?

  80. Re:This is a troll and a half. by iminplaya · · Score: 1

    In my opinion the biggest enemy of the US democratic process is the financing of the elections.

    No, the problem is influence the money has over the voters. Nobody is forcing them to vote for the guy with most money. And if they don't look past what mass media spoon feeds them, then that too is their own fault. Let them spend and contribute all they want. It's up to us to see past it and vote on the things that actually matter. Education is the key, not more legislation.

    --
    What?
  81. Re:It's government corruption by Philip+K+Dickhead · · Score: 1

    In Soviet AmeriKKKa, Rose Revolution has YOU!

    --
    "Speaking the Truth in times of universal deceit is a revolutionary act." -- George Orwell
  82. Stargate? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Clearly they are hiding a starg-

    Umm, nevermind that, I don't know what came over me, move along.

  83. Re:You're absolutely right...this needs to be chan by Rudolf · · Score: 1

    If you sit around on your ass waiting cashing in capitol gains (which means you sold a stock and are taking money _out_ of the system)

    I don't understand this. If I sell a bunch of stock for a gain, then someone had to buy that stock, so how is the money taken out of the system? Yes, I took some money, but someone else put some in.

  84. Re:It's government corruption by ibbie · · Score: 1

    The screw will turn, my friend, and your party won't always be in power.

    That's the point: deterrent. If crimes were committed by the Bush administration then they need to be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law to send a strong message to the next Republican administration that the law must be obeyed.

    I agree, but believe it should send a strong message to any administration.

    Then we'll see how much you like all the investigations.

    Bring it on. While I strongly believe that Obama is far better than the Republican alternative, I have no love for Obama either. If Obama breaks the law, punish him to the full extent.

    Precisely my point. The party itself does not matter. They should all be held accountable. I may have voted for Obama to be in office, but I never voted for him to have a "get out of jail free" card.

    --
    The wise follow a damned path, for to know is to be forsaken.
  85. Re:It's government corruption by Toonol · · Score: 1

    Well educated lawyers seem to lead the pack in willfully wrong interpretations of the constitution.

  86. Re:It's government corruption by Atlantis-Rising · · Score: 1

    Or rather, in fact, the constitution simply is not clear.

    It's intent and it's meaning are not clear, and this is perfectly obvious from its historically variable court interpretation.

    --
    "It is possible to commit no errors and still lose. That is not a weakness. That is life." -Peak Performance
  87. obama can do one of two things by circletimessquare · · Score: 1, Insightful

    1. govern

    2. engage in partisan vindictiveness

    the job of the presidency, believe it or not, is to govern the people. committed partisans meanwhile, from the right and the left, see nothing in the presidency except the ultimate bully pulpit in which to engage in partisan warfare

    so obama is choosing the high road, he is letting past indiscretions slide, and he is focusing on uniting the american people rather than engaging in the same tired disgusting internecine warfare, plenty of which you see in other comments in this thread, both those aimed at republicans, and those aimed at obama

    basically, fuck you you fucking partisans, from the right, and the left. please choke on your own bile. its all we see coming from your mouths anyway. nothing positive. nothing aimed at inclusiveness and uniting. just words aimed at dividing along tired typical stereotypical ideological divides

    i'm glad obama is choosing not to sink to your pathetic blind level, and focus on actually governing the people, which is what he has to do, rather than feed into your pathetic drama queen soap operas

    there is an aspect of american political life which is so blind, so braindead, so kneejerk "defend everything from the right, attack everything from the left", or visa versa, that there is nothing you add at ALL of any value, to any discussion. just please, shut the fuck up, blind partisans of the left, blind partisans of the right. and that includes large does of the comments in this thread: SHUT THE FUCK UP. you don't help, and you are extremely tired and tedious to all who hear your typical braindead words. say something positive and inclusive with those on the other side of the aisle, OR SAY NOTHING AT ALL

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  88. Easy: It's called EXCHANGE. by Hasai · · Score: 1

    "Sorry, your Honor, but it's an Exchange email system."

    "Oh, all right then. CASE DISMISSED."

    Exchange: Your solution for Plausible Deniablilty.

    --

    Regards;

    Hasai

  89. Re:You're absolutely right...this needs to be chan by rohan972 · · Score: 1

    I suggest that, rather than taxing earned income, we exempt it and tax only unearned income.

    Or are you trying to defend those who don't work for a living?

    My father was self-employed. For decades, when others had holidays, he worked, when others relaxed on weekends, he worked, when others finished their work when the clock said they could, he finished work when the job was done. For decades, when others funded their lifestyles on their credit cards, he and my mother spent frugally, saved and invested. Now, in their retirement, the value of their assets and therefore their income is destroyed by who? Bankers, government bureaucrats and financiers who all have jobs. The wealth is being taken from my parents, who worked and saved, and given to those who relaxed and borrowed. Where's the justice in that? Your plan, in this case, would give the thieves a free pass and tax the victims.

    The "unearned income" you want to tax ought to be the basis of everyone's retirement.

  90. Re:You're absolutely right...this needs to be chan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There has never been a time when everyone has had to work for a living. We should be working towards reducing the number that need to, not increasing it.

  91. Women. by refactored · · Score: 1

    Well, actually if you read Zimbardo's book. He was thinking "Cool! What exciting results I'm getting", but his girlfriend (now wife) threatened to dump him if he didn't stop it right away.

    Which reminds me of the other fascinating datapoint from the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission report. Women were equally likely as men to be victims of violence, but 500 times less likely to be the perpetrators. Read that and weep. 500 hundred times better than men.

    Want to make America better? Listen to your women.

    1. Re:Women. by operagost · · Score: 1

      Women use nonviolent means to do evil; that is all. Women are not "better".

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    2. Re:Women. by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      Read that and weep. 500 hundred times better than men.

      No, I wont actually. You know those "honor killings" that we periodically hear about, when some woman is suspected of being promiscuous/having sex before marriage, etc? Yes, men are the ones who do the important task of stoning some poor girl to death, but guess who turns the girl into the religious police in the first place - women.

      Just because women don't commit the violence themselves doesn't mean they don't have any responsibility for it.

      Oh, and how bout that female genital mutilation, which is performed by women:

      Sheelan Anwar Omer, a shy 7-year-old Kurdish girl, bounded into her neighbor's house with an ear-to-ear smile, looking for the party her mother had promised.

      There was no celebration. Instead, a local woman quickly locked a rusty red door behind Sheelan, who looked bewildered when her mother ordered the girl to remove her underpants. Sheelan began to whimper, then tremble, while the women pushed apart her legs and a midwife raised a stainless-steel razor blade in the air. "I do this in the name of Allah!" she intoned.

      As the midwife sliced off part of Sheelan's genitals, the girl let out a high-pitched wail heard throughout the neighborhood. As she carried the sobbing child back home, Sheelan's mother smiled with pride.

    3. Re:Women. by refactored · · Score: 1
      I bet at the root of that little horror story is some patriarchal society dictate.

      Bishop Tutu noted that the few exceptions to the rule, where women were the perpetrators attracted huge amount of media _because_ they were so strange.

      Women are often the villains of literature and film, because it is so horrifying like unlike reality.

    4. Re:Women. by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      I bet at the root of that little horror story is some patriarchal society dictate.

      Translation: when a man does something wrong, it's the man's fault. When a woman does something wrong, it's still a man's fault.

  92. Re:It's government corruption by rtb61 · · Score: 0, Troll

    There is a standing international law where all countries are financial liable for all the actions of their government regardless of how corrupt they are. So for example prosecute Bush Cheney and co for illegal entry to the Iraq war, win the case and immediately get sued by every US family (and allies) whose family member died in a illegal war, 4,200 odd, times by ten million dollars 42 billion dollars now to make that even more interesting add civil suits coming out of Iraq. Send Bush Cheney and Co to prison for torture and murder, something on the order of a thousand people and a ten billion goes down the drain.

    In fact pretty much where ever you look people have been hurt and killed all over the world by the corruption of the US government under the republicans both the administration and in the congress and the senate. You pretty much always end up having to pay billions of dollars in civil damages, something the US can't afford in the current economic climate. In doing so it is something that immediately brands them as unjust and as accessories to the crimes of the previous administration for failing to prosecute them.

    As it turns out the likely safest route is to go whole hog and charge specific members with treason for the overall destructiveness and corruption of that administration. That way all their criminal activities just become evidence for the greater crime rather than convictions for the lesser crimes and, you can bury some things for reasons of national security (pardon the pun). Obama and his administration are stuck in between a rock and a hard place. Prosecute and possibly cost the US billions in civil damages, don't prosecute and be immediately tarred by the previous administrations corruption and that is the only thing they will be remembered for, that and for inviting even worse administration to appear in the future, after all Bush Cheney and Co got away with what they did, how much more corrupt can future administrations be.

    --
    Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
  93. Re:It's government corruption by sumdumass · · Score: 1

    You do realize that Treason is a specific legal terms and requires specific actions to have taken place with the witness of at least two people right?

    You can't prosecute anyone in the administration for treason relating to acts of the administration. And you can't change the law without changing the constitution to have the legal term treason be applied more places or prosecuted easier. It's in the damn constitution for a reason, it's because however catastrophic an administration or government's official can be, you can always call it treason to some extent. This is the reason why treason was specifically limited to levying war against the US or the States in the US, or in adhering to their enemies, giving them aid and comfort and requires testimony of two witnesses to the same overt act, or on confession in open court. Simply running the country into the ground is no where near treason.

  94. You can't handle the truth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Gimme a break folks. Some stuff needs to stay buried. Especially stuff the Bush administration did. For the good of all of us. For a good deal more time than a month.

    Do you think anyone ever told us the REAL reason we invaded Iraq? Do you think you want to know? I don't. It doesn't matter how many times over we were right about the reasons that were given, they clearly couldn't have been the real reasons, because they were moronic. Those reasons were given to satisfy morons, and give political cover. Tony Blair signed on real quick, though, eh? He fell on his sword, in fact.

    Why does Obama advocate for "transparency?" Because that's the only way the government is not ever going to be able to pull these kinds of crimes again. Government secrets have to die, because what happens when they are allowed to exist is killing this country.

    Not the secrets themselves, but the crimes that happen beneath their cover. That's what kills this country. And you expect Obama to just open up the files on those crimes?

    Our enemies, who are real because we have done many awful things, would love that.

    Letting the past out of the bag, posthaste, isn't going to help us a whit. The crimes have been done already, lifting the shroud of secrecy would only allow our enemies to attack us. Let it come out in 50 years, how awful the United States has been. Let it come out now, in a big rush for "truth," and there will be massive civil unrest. Obama's government will fail, because no one in America will ever trust the government for a decade to come.

    It was deemed, during previous administrations, that we couldn't handle the truth, that we should be treated as children, and all these absurd cries for total revelation are just proving that viewpoint.

    Stop acting like children.

    1. Re:You can't handle the truth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh okay, yeah, it's all our fault again. 100%.
      The big bad US of A. We're to blame for everything. We created all our enemies, and every other nation on Earth would be peace loving and friendly and well meaning if we, the "great satan", just stopped fucking everyone else over. In fact, if it weren't for the US, the world would probably be much closer to a peaceful utopia.

      Right.

      Talk about acting like a child, what a retarded and naive worldview.

  95. He's dead by Samari711 · · Score: 1

    Tragic plane crash just before he was supposed to testify about it. After several other instances of plane trouble.

    --

    I never said I was smart, I just said I was smarter than you

  96. Ima pick up my guitar and play... by Chordonblue · · Score: 1

    ...just like yesterday. /Get on my knees and pray... ;)

    --
    "...Well, there's egg and bacon; egg sausage and bacon; egg and spam; egg bacon and spam; egg bacon sausage and spam..."
  97. The real question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The question that no-one seems to ask is: What is in that e-mails that even your saviour Obama is prepared to lie about?

    And no, I didn't RTFA.

  98. Re:This is a troll and a half. by Teun · · Score: 1

    You are right in principle.
    But practically humans are weak and to take high campaign spending out of the equation would indeed further the level playing field.

    --
    "The likes of Facebook and WhatsApp are free to those whose privacy is of zero value."
  99. Re:It's government corruption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow, I love how everyone here wants to blame it all on Bush. The Dems controlled congress for a pretty long time now. The fact is your average american has no idea how the system works and tends to blame the "front man" for all the issues.

    These people are human just like the rest of us, even if they are congressman.

    The man went from the highest approval rating in history to the lowest. That tells you something about the intelligence of the average american. Some would say that says something about bush. But think about it, most Americans believed obama was going to pull our troops out and end the war.

    Reality check the dems controlled congress for 2 years prior and now they have full control. What happens, Obama is in office and we send another 17000 over.

    The war is controlled by congress. Both parties are for it and were for it. The dems used it to get in office that is all.

    Bush didn't trick them. They all received the same info he did. They all voted for the war.

    As for this email issue. You ever think both presidents don't want them released for matters of national security. For all we know they discuss some crucial things that are still in play.

    In the end america voted for the person that lied to them without thinking it through. Dems control congress at the time of presidential campaign. Dem says I'll pull the troops out and americans eat it up. Instead they should have voted for the man that said we can't do that but I will lead you as best we can in this situation.

    These are the same people that are more interested in the biggest loser than the presidential campaign. But they vote anyway...

  100. Re:It's government corruption by cyberchondriac · · Score: 1

    Lets make sure they guarantee perpetual employment for themselves and their peers by writing every law so that a normal person has to hire a lawyer to translate it. Does anyone else see a conflict of interest here? The Constitution doesn't require a lawyer to translate it, only a bit of average High School education. See the point?

    I wish I had mod points to give you. So true.
    The sin is that we live in a society today where we are practically forced to hire high paid professionals in order to interpret and make freakin' sense of the very laws that govern every faction of our lives and which we are mandated to obey.
    "Legalese" is like some kind of secret code to most of us.
    "Ignorance of the law is no excuse" makes it even scarier.
    I know life is complex but something here is very broken.

    --

    Look back up at my post, now look back down, you're on the Internet. Now look back up. I'm a signature.
  101. If anyone would RTFA... by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

    I have no doubt that this effect is replaying itself yet again. It's a good sign that there are so few real scandals that we have to invent our own, but a bad sign that we are so eager to be distracted by scandal.

    Yeah, there's no doubt this is the same thing as before. Because in TFA written by one of the plaintiffs itself it says that the Motion to Dismiss was filed by the government on January 21, and the National Security Archive is only just now responding to that motion.

    January 21, one day after inagration and weeks before Obama's Attorney General was confirmed. Exactly like in the case of the motion to stay in the illegal wiretap lawsuit (that everyone who didn't RTFA went so ballistic over), this motion was not filed as a conscious policy decision by the Obama administration. It was a default continuation of the policies of the Bush DoJ, by Bush DoJ appointees. The paperwork had already been done before Obama took office.

    That doesn't mean Obama actually disagrees with Bush on this, and won't try to have the lawsuit dismissed. It does mean that this is in and of itself not indicative of anything other than that a previous President's influence does not immediately end as soon as the next guy takes office.

    I love the National Security Archive, I wish them well in their suit (and their response to the motion seems pretty strong). But I think they too should wait to judge Obama's Justice Dept. until after Obama's Justice Dept. actually weighs in on the issue.

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
  102. Possible You Didn't See This by weston · · Score: 1
  103. Re:Lynching Bush Administration worthless to Obama by Uberbah · · Score: 1

    but so far it seems like obama is still campaigning

    More like he's still drinking the bipartisan kool aid. Why he thinks the party that manufactured a bogus perjury charge against a sitting president will now be reasonable is beyond me.

    And beyond that, going after the Busco criminals is not only the right thing to do, it's a political winner. If the Dems really went after Republican lawbreaking, the GOP would soon be joining the Whigs in the dustbin of political history.

  104. the two-party red herring by Uberbah · · Score: 1

    Does anyone else besides me think a two-party system absolutely sucks?

    Yup, there are plenty of other people that are touting the wrong cure for the disease. Britain, Israel and Italy have multiple parties, and they struggle with corruption and gridlock as much or more than we do. And I call it the "two party red herring" because while you might be limited on the number of practical parties, you are not limited on the number of viewpoints in your candidates, which is the important thing. Was Kucinich on the same page as Hillary on the issues? How about Ron Paul and Rudy Giuliani?

    Both parties are nothing but rubber stamps for special interest groups that use the iron triangle to get what they want.

    And here's what would change if we had a third party: nothing. Our election system is set up so that you have to raise fantastic sums to get elected, which means asking favors, which means those favors will be called in. Until we have all elections publicly financed, it wont matter if you have 2 parties or 200: we'll still have corruption, graft, and back room deals forming policy.

  105. Re:It's government corruption by Uberbah · · Score: 1

    Wow, I love how everyone here wants to blame it all on Bush.

    No, really - just search for "burrowed appointees" with Google.

  106. Warning !!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Obama had some VERY STRANGE provisions written in most of his January 23th-passed laws & edicts : wait 120 days before doing anything ...

    What is planned for the month of May will bring Change ... but will it be what is sought for, I strongly doubt it.

    Especially in light of Islam's Dajjal prophecies !!!

    [Disclaimer : God, Allah, Buddha, Yahveh, Brahma are only different names for THE ONE SINGLE ENTITY WE SHOULD PRAISE]

  107. Re:It's government corruption by Teancum · · Score: 1

    Do you think it was any better for the Andrew Jackson administration trying to deal with the "entire Supreme Court" filled with all of the Whig appointees? What about the rest of the Federal bureaucracy that he also inherited in the 1830's?

    This is nothing new and complaining that Obama has a unique situation here is forgetting history.

    One of the reasons why the choice of president is so critical is explicitly due to the long lasting impact their decisions make. John Marshall is one of those political appointees who far outlasted the presidential administration that appointed him, and set the tone of the judicial system for decades afterward. Heck, the son of John Adams (the person who appointed Marshall) even served as president and left office before Marshall retired. Sound familiar?

  108. Re:It's government corruption by Teancum · · Score: 1

    Few courts have the balls to interpret "congress shall make no law" to really mean that no law can be recognized. It takes a very strong judge to be able to stand up against a law that the other two branches of the government have said is not only constitutional but should be enforced.

    In recent years it has been things like McCain-Feingold (one of the most wretched laws restricting and controlling political speech) that have yet to even be challenged.... yet those affected by such laws must follow such laws even if they are later proven to be unconstitutional in a strict sense of the word. How can political speech be controlled by law when the constitution says no law can be enacted in the first place?

    This isn't even the classic yelling fire or anything remotely associated with the fringes of free speech like pornography or the "right" to send spam via e-mail. If something this basic and head-smacking obvious is given a pass, no wonder the rest of the constitution is largely ignored.

  109. Re:It's government corruption by Teancum · · Score: 1

    The problem with this thinking is that it is assuming the lawyers.... while perhaps good at writing and drafting laws... should also be the people making the actual decisions as to if a law should be created in the first place or not.

    You mention a bridge being built by an engineer. That is fine and well, but somebody has to make the decision for if the bridge needs to be built in the first place at all. That decision isn't something necessarily done by the engineer, but rather by land owners, and by members of the "community" where the bridge is being built. Business owners who need the bridge for transportation, perhaps replacing a ferry or perhaps an older bridge that does not meet traffic capacity that is needed might suggest the need for a new bridge. There are other factors here as well. You don't need to be an engineer to make the decision to build it in the first place, or even to understand the basics of how the thing works.

    The same can be said for governing a country. Members of Congress are there to represent the people of live in the country, and the makeup of that body ought to represent society at large. It is useful to have former CEOs, school teachers, miners, farmers, computer geeks, and others directly in the debate to decide what should be a law.... and those decisions should not be exclusively made by an elite class of individuals who think only along one kind of thinking and mental training.

    I'm not saying that government should be run by engineers either (god, please no!) but rather a diversity of thought should go into the decision making process.

    BTW, the legislative process is by design non-productive. One of my largest pet peeves of politicians is those who assert that they are highly productive by showing all of the pork or legislation they have produced while in office. To me, that implies they are not doing their job and are instead swapping "favors" to get that pork and approving garbage from their fellow legislators that should never have seen the light of day. Furthermore, by sad experience it has been proven time and again that any legislation that is passed quickly usually ends up as some of the worst and most damaging to the country in the long run. I don't care if this is Obama's omnibus pork bill that was recently passed or the "authorization to use force" bill that was passed during the Bush administration. Neither bill should have been passed as quickly as did happen, and more debate and deliberation should have gone into both of these laws.

  110. Re:It's government corruption by Antique+Geekmeister · · Score: 1

    Oh, yes, I agree that this is a recurring issue. I'm just saying that Mr. Obama, like every president before him, can't simply turn the entire federal government onto a new course on a dime, and it's not reasonable to expect that.

  111. Re:It's government corruption by Atlantis-Rising · · Score: 1

    I don't think it is clear. The law says "Congress shall make no law abridging the freedom of speech", but that says absolutely nothing on its face about campaign finance. Nor does it say anything whatsoever about blogs, radio, television, or any written material that is not published but is otherwise distributed.

    The law says political speech cannot be controlled. That is all. The fact is, Courts have tended to err very strongly on the freedom of speech clause well beyond its face value.

    --
    "It is possible to commit no errors and still lose. That is not a weakness. That is life." -Peak Performance
  112. Re:This is a troll and a half. by iminplaya · · Score: 1

    The best way to help the weak is to make them strong enough to resist. Otherwise, where's the incentive to change?

    --
    What?
  113. Re:It's government corruption by Teancum · · Score: 1

    This is precisely the kind of doublespeak that make most people hate lawyers and politicans. No law can be made means no law can be made.

    In terms of McCain-Feingold having nothing to do with political speech..... bullshit! That is entirely what it is about, including how speech can be done, where it can be done, and who can do the speaking. If you don't follow these "laws" that constitutionally congress "shall not make", you can't engage in the exercise of speech under the most obvious and clearly political kind that was the very basis of this clause of the 1st Amendment.

    You can rationalize any act and twist the meaning of anything to promote your viewpoint, which is what I guess this all is about. Unfortunately, by only giving lip service to the constitution, it devalues that document to the point that it is worthless. I just mentioned one very unconstitutional act, and it is hardly the only one that exists.

  114. Re:It's government corruption by Atlantis-Rising · · Score: 1

    The text itself says "Congress shall make no law abridging the freedom of speech."

    Demonstrate how campaign finance is speech. Does money talk? No, it does not. Speech is communication by the exchange of spoken, or audible, words. Prima facie, the First Amendment does not protect any other kind of expression.

    States are not congress. Prima facie, the state governments are not bound by the First Amendment. The chilling effect is not an abridgment; the State is free to create a law punishing you for your speech afterward, because that's not an abridgment of your right to free speech.

    This is my problem, you see. You don't actually want the government to obey the constitution. You just want to interpret it in a manner that you think is appropriate.

    --
    "It is possible to commit no errors and still lose. That is not a weakness. That is life." -Peak Performance
  115. Re:It's government corruption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You are wrong, the states are bound to follow the U. S. Constitution. It's a national umbrella of law and they can not violate it.

  116. APOCALYPSE - The Great Lie [video] by lionellx · · Score: 1

    APOCALYPSE - The Great Lie [video] http://video.antollma.org/ApocalypseTheGreatLie.html

  117. Re:It's government corruption by Atlantis-Rising · · Score: 1

    That was extended to the States by the Supreme Court through the 14th Amendment in a series of decisions starting in the 1890s. It was not always that way and in fact, the text says so such thing. The text explicitly excludes the States from obligations under the First Amendment, for example, by its distinct use of 'Congress'.

    --
    "It is possible to commit no errors and still lose. That is not a weakness. That is life." -Peak Performance
  118. No, it was not. by kiddailey · · Score: 1

    There was no debate. As the Wall Street Journal (and numerous other publications) points out, a group of beurocrats with their own and their party's interests in mind sat down and negotiated the bill.

    "The final terms of a stimulus plan will be hammered out by a conference among House and Senate leaders, who will bargain over how to reconcile competing Senate and House versions of the plan."

    They chose a very appropriate word there. "Bargain." We no longer debate. We bargain.

    As for the rest of congress -- Like I said, there was not a final draft of the bill available until less than 24 hours before the voting took place. And I didn't say this was limited to Republicans. I said "the whole of the house."

    Regardless, even if every representative could have gotten a copy of the bill to review, you're being quite unrealistic to state that simply having staffers is enough to read, research and comprehend 1100 pages of law and all of the associated bills referenced within in less than 24 hours. Let alone debate it in any publicly visible forum.

    The only so-called "debate" that you could possibly be inferring is the media's vague talking points on the bill. But even then the media spent most of it's time on biased opinion-presented-as-journalism nonsense. The leftist media praising the bill and calling the right idiots for questioning anything about it, and the right media playing along, focusing on the name calling and "those evil Democrats."

    The reality is that the last thing any of the House and Senate leaders want is debate. Debate just gets in the way of "bypartisianship" laws chock full of goodies that can bragged about on the pulpit next election cycle. The economic downturn was simply a great opportunity to use FUD as an excuse to rush through billions in spending without review.

    Cynical? Sure. But that is the state of things and anyone not blinded by party bias can see that.

    And for what it's worth, stop playing and feeding the damn blame game. This isn't about Democrats vs Republicans. It's about our government out of control, government involvement being largely responsible for the mess we're in, and more government being far, far from an appropriate or effective solution.

    Read the bill in its final form here:
    http://www.whitehouse.gov/the_press_office/ARRA_public_review/

  119. Yeah, it WAS by Uberbah · · Score: 1

    "The final terms of a stimulus plan will be hammered out by a conference among House and Senate leaders, who will bargain over how to reconcile competing Senate and House versions of the plan."

    Which of course is normal legislative procedure . Next up, the WSJ reports on how water is wet...

    As for the rest of congress -- Like I said, there was not a final draft of the bill available until less than 24 hours before the voting took place. And I didn't say this was limited to Republicans. I said "the whole of the house."

    Which again, is whining misdirection. They could have read the damn bill in the days and weeks beforehand, and then read any changes in the last 24 hours. But why do the obvious when you can grandstand?

    The leftist media

    You guys still pushing that? After the media spent months making shit up about Gore (Inventing the Internet) while ignoring Bush taking credit for patients rights legislation that he vetoed as governor, after the media acted as a willing propagandist on the Iraq war, after sitting on NSA wiretapping through the 2004 election, after continuing to put pro-invasion pundits on to talk about the Iraq war while continuing to ignore those who got it right in the first place, you're still pushing this "leftist media" claptrap? Even Rush has started to call it the "drive by media", and when Rush is more reasonable than you are, you need clinical help.

    It's about our government out of control, government involvement being largely responsible for the mess we're in, and more government being far, far from an appropriate or effective solution.

    The lack of government is why we're in the mess we're in. And government is the only entity that can get out of this mess, by spending to create demand. Just how many times do you Hooverites need to drive the country into the ground before you realize your ideas are absolute crap?

    1. Re:Yeah, it WAS by kiddailey · · Score: 1

      I never said it wasn't normal legislative procedure.

      The bill was not released to congress days and weeks beforehand.

      I assume by "you guys" you mean Republicans, conservatives, Hooverites, right-wingers et al. To assume that I am one of those (or any part for that matter) when I am definitely not just proves your overwhelming bias against anything that doesn't fit in your world view.

      Yes, there is a portion of the media that panders to the left. Just as there is a segment that panders to the right. A few examples of deviation from this norm doesn't mean they don't overall. And I'd hardly quote Rush Limbaugh as a paragon of reason. Yikes.

      Lack of government? But of course someone who believes that government is the only answer (the most disheartening part of your reply) and who has such a blatant hate for the Republican party would say such a thing. If only you and everyone like you could channel that hate towards BOTH political parties that are driving our country into the ground ...

      Government spending will not create demand. It will create bigger government, and at the expense of personal liberty.

    2. Re:Yeah, it WAS by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      I never said it wasn't normal legislative procedure.

      Then why bring it up in terms of an oligarchical abuse of power.

      The bill was not released to congress days and weeks beforehand.

      Because it was evolving legislation. Again, pretending that normal legislative procedure is something out of the ordinary.

      I assume by "you guys" you mean Republicans, conservatives, Hooverites, right-wingers et al. To assume that I am one of those (or any part for that matter) when I am definitely not just proves your overwhelming bias against anything that doesn't fit in your world view.

      Except of course that your use of "leftist media" outs you as a combination of the above, Mr. Pot.

      Yes, there is a portion of the media that panders to the left. Just as there is a segment that panders to the right.

      Ah, I see we've moved on to the false equivalency part of the equation. When Republicans controlled all three branches of government, they made up the majority of media appearances. This was justified that the GOP was the party in power. But now that the Democrats are in charge...the media still features 2 Republicans for every Democrat.

      But of course someone who believes that government is the only answer (the most disheartening part of your reply)

      But of course you're attacking a straw man in a rather pathetic fashion. No Democrat, no liberal, no progressive, nor even an out-and-out socialist has ever said that "government is the only answer". The point is that less government for the sake of less government is as asinine as more government for the sake of more government.

      Government spending will not create demand.

      Of course it will; you wingnuts really need to take remdial economics:

      GDP = consumption + gross investment + government spending + (exports - imports)

      Government spending (infrastructure, research, etc) increases demand for labor and resources - which means...drumroll...jobs.

      It will create bigger government, and at the expense of personal liberty.

      Yawn. Why don't you go join one of those militias that are popping up again, after taking a nap through 8 years of Republican wiretapping & torture, you hack.

  120. RE: The Power of Sex by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Intoxicating, isn't it.

    You, as President of the United States of America, can order, the arrest, of any, human being on planet Earth.

    You, as President of the United States of America, can order the torture of any human being on the planet Earth, who is in your keeping.

    Torture, is not an "information gathering" device.

    Rather, torture, is for only the sexual gratification of those giving torture, and those who ordered the events and acts of torture.

    How beautiful, how satisfied the face of George Walker Bush, witnessing the acts of torture.

    How envious, how wanton, the face of Barak Obama, hearing the details, of his, powers, soon to be curtailed, if fate wants, as President of the United States, and how he, now wants, to keep, those powers, will do any thing, any action, no cost so high, no cost so great, to keep, those powers, to him, to him and him, alone.

    Such is the power of sex, sex for the promelgation of national polity, the national polity throbbing, without control, in the croch of the President of the United States of America.