Slashdot Mirror


Patriot Act Spy Powers To Expire As Rand Paul Blocks USA Freedom Act Vote

Saturday, we mentioned that three major spying powers that the U.S. government has exercised under the Patriot Act might be nixed, as the sections of the Act granting authority to use them expires. The Daily Dot reports that Senator (and presidential contender) Rand Paul today used Senate rules to block a bill which would have extended those powers, which means that as of midnight Sunday on the U.S. east coast, sections 206, 207 and 215 of the Patriot Act will have expired. Says the Daily Dot's article, linked by reader blottsie: The reform bill, which the House passed before leaving town for a week-long recess, would end the government's bulk collection of Americans' phone records under the Patriot Act's controversial Section 215 but leaves the other two provisions intact. ... Sunday's procedural meltdown was the second narrow defeat for the USA Freedom Act. In a late-night session on Friday, May 22, the bill fell three votes short of an initial procedural step after [Senate Majority Leader] McConnell lobbied hard against it. The Senate's failure to meet its deadline was a blow to President Obama, who on Friday had warned lawmakers that the country would be vulnerable if the USA Freedom Act did not pass.

51 of 500 comments (clear)

  1. I'm afraid! Please send hugs! by TheRealHocusLocus · · Score: 5, Funny

    I am so jittery... as the clock strikes Midnight I will no longer bask in the protective glow of Section 215 of the USA Patriot Act. I cannot fall asleep without the reassuring sound of telephone records being gathered. Surely something awful will happen tonight or tomorrow. Maybe I will try to organize the neighborhood for a continuous vigil until the Act is restored. But first, I'll just turn on the radio and catch some news...

    --
    <blink>down the rabbit hole</blink>
    1. Re:I'm afraid! Please send hugs! by rtb61 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Considering the anthrax attack that was used to promote the Patriot Act in the first place, you have very good reason to be afraid. People who want the power provided by those corrupt laws will be more than willing to do quite extreme things to get that power back.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
  2. RAND PAUL REVOLUTION by Noah+Haders · · Score: 4, Insightful

    he's got my vote.

    1. Re:RAND PAUL REVOLUTION by 0123456 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The rest of his profile is just bat shit crazy.

      True. Actually requiring Congress to declare war before you can attack another country? Ridiculous. Term limits for Congress? Absurd. Cutting taxes? What could he be thinking?

    2. Re:RAND PAUL REVOLUTION by blue+trane · · Score: 4, Insightful

      We need Sanders to use the same tactics to block any Republican cuts to Social Security.

    3. Re:RAND PAUL REVOLUTION by peragrin · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Rand Paul isnt for any of those things. They are sound bites.

      Look at his budget proposals some day. They paint a different picture

      --
      i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
    4. Re:RAND PAUL REVOLUTION by PopeRatzo · · Score: 5, Informative

      Representative Democracy. The worst system ever devised, except for all the others.

      You think we have a "representative democracy" here in the US?

      Representative of whom? Do you believe this government represents you? Do you think it represents the will of the people?

      https://www.opensecrets.org/pa...

      https://www.opensecrets.org/ov...

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    5. Re:RAND PAUL REVOLUTION by Brulath · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Term limits for Congress? Absurd. Cutting taxes? What could he be thinking?

      Term limits aren't necessarily a good thing, as they're going to encourage politicians to look for places to be employed once they're finished with their term (as a primary focus for the entire term). They also reinforce short-term thinking, as the individual politicians won't need to deal with the fallout of their decisions if they have no chance to be re-elected. Finally, the networking and experience required to get anything done in any political environment takes quite a while to build up – if you replace people at too high a rate they'll never reach the efficiency stage, which may or may not be a bad thing depending on your views.

      Most simple solutions are horribly flawed, which is often the main reason they haven't been employed previously. Cutting taxes isn't likely to help much with paying off the 21 trillion dollar debt, for example, unless new taxes on richer people are introduced.

    6. Re:RAND PAUL REVOLUTION by beelsebob · · Score: 4, Insightful

      To be fair, the cutting taxes one is pretty insane.

      The country can't afford to provide health care for everyone. It can't afford to look after its veterans. It can't afford to keep its freeways in serviceable condition (in fact, in such bad shape that the bridges are collapsing!).

      America doesn't need tax cuts. It needs tax hikes, and military spending cuts.

    7. Re:RAND PAUL REVOLUTION by blue+trane · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Debt is a distraction. The country's had a debt since the very first administration, and conservatives have been predicting imminent doom and gloom every year. Except it hasn't happened, each generation's standard of living increases, grandkids are better off than their grandparents. Reagan proved deficits don't matter, after campaigning against Carter's $68 billion deficit then raising that by a factor of four.

      The private sector thrives on debt and money creation. Government should too. If government spends money financed at zero cost through the Fed to improve the General Welfare, why would unexpected, runaway inflation occur? But as a hedge, index all incomes to inflation to eliminate any inflation tax. Indexation guarantees purchasing power does not decrease.

      In conclusion, Rand Paul's economics are feudal, archaic. We can and should spend more on social services, such as a Basic Income.

    8. Re: RAND PAUL REVOLUTION by Samantha+Wright · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The summary is misleading; the act will probably pass on Tuesday, and the provisions will be restored. It's depressing how completely dishonest this story is.

      --
      Bio questions? Ask me to start a Q&A journal. Computer analogies available for most topics!
    9. Re:RAND PAUL REVOLUTION by Alomex · · Score: 3, Insightful

      In real life, as opposed to in your head, evidence suggests that to the contrary, what is better for everyone is a rather expansive state.

      To wit, in most indicators, including wealth, large state countries such as western Europe, Canada and Japan are at least comparable and often better than the USA, while small state countries such as Somalia or Haiti are much below.

      So what you say might sound very logic and obvious to you, but is contrary to the facts. I.e. the quintessential definition of truthiness: it ought to be right because it sounds right, facts be damned.

    10. Re:RAND PAUL REVOLUTION by Alomex · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Except that we aren't bringing any more money... minor little detail you left out in your post.

      While the Laffer curve undoubtedly exists, every single tax-cut experiment in the last 30 years in the USA suggests we are already to the left of the peak, and hence lower taxes simply means lower revenues.

      This should be obvious to anyone who is paying attention to economic data rather than GOP talking points.

      p.s. In fact this was a surprise to myself and many other economists. They had guesstimated the peak of the Laffer curve around a top marginal rate of 40-60%, now all evidence suggests is around 75%.

      p.p.s. I'm opposed to a marginal rate of 75%, but not because lowering it would mean increased revenues: facts show that it doesn't.

    11. Re:RAND PAUL REVOLUTION by BronsCon · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Maintain a wise diet, exercise moderately, get laid off, then get hit by a bus. And live. Then, be glad the government was there to pick you up.

      --
      APK quotes people (including myself) without context and should not be trusted. Just thought you should know.
    12. Re:RAND PAUL REVOLUTION by serviscope_minor · · Score: 5, Interesting

      what do you mean "we should spend more on basic income"???

      are you saying i should just quit my job because the government ( you) will pay for it? THANK YOU!!! ive been waiting for this day for so long!!!!

      Yes, basically. Firstly, why not? It will provide enough for basic food and basic shelter but little in the way of luxury. We are rich enough collectively to make sure everyone gets to eat and have a roof over their heads.

      Secondly, this is more or less already the case.

      The thing is if you have a basic income, you can also scrap a whole bunch of laws. Minimum wage, tax credits, food stamps, all that can just go in the bin. The basic income is more transparent and simpler. It also doesn't require vulnerable people to dealwith vast amounts of government buearacracy.

      Finally it subsidises rich companies less. At the moment many large companies etc don't pay a living wage, so people need to get employed and then get some form if income support. Oh and people are trapped living paycheck to paycheck so the companies can more or less be as evil as they like. Once people have a basic income, they have the choice whether to sell labour for that price and also have much more freedom in negotiations.

      Most of the arguments seem win-win to me.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    13. Re:RAND PAUL REVOLUTION by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 3, Insightful

      In conclusion, Rand Paul's economics are feudal, archaic.

      So they are, but the president does not unilaterally decide economic policy.

      A Paul in the office would primarily mean two things. First, he'd dismantle as much of the executive as he could within the boundaries that are set out by the Congress (just to give one example in addition to this whole NSA thing - he could legitimately, by executive order, remove cannabis from all DEA schedules, effectively legalizing it on federal level). And second, he would veto most Congress bills, so only supermajority bills could pass. I suspect that budgets would ultimately fall into that category.

      I'm somewhere between liberal and libertarian with a dash of socialism, personally (e.g. I support universal basic income guarantee), but I'd be willing to tolerate Paul's cookery on economic issues if this means a major advance in individual rights, more sane foreign policy, and further democratization of government (through electoral reform and decentralization). Hell, if US stops waging endless wars overseas, that alone will have a greater positive effect on the country's economy than any fiddling with taxes.

    14. Re:RAND PAUL REVOLUTION by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 3, Insightful

      In real life, as opposed to in your head, evidence suggests that to the contrary, what is better for everyone is a rather expansive state. To wit, in most indicators, including wealth, large state countries such as western Europe, Canada and Japan are at least comparable and often better than the USA, while small state countries such as Somalia or Haiti are much below

      By that logic Greece should be paradise.

      Right now most big, rich, western countries with high quality of life are supporting themselves either via oil or via debt. That is not sustainable, which is why many European countries are either significantly cutting back the state or being told they really need to by various creditors. Balanced budgets as in Germany are sustainable, but Germany is also a fair bit poorer than people realise: wages have hardly gone up there for many years.

  3. Is this a win? I can't tell... by Okian+Warrior · · Score: 4, Informative

    The Huffington Post was live updating the proceedings, and said this:

    USA Freedom Act advances 77-17

    In a stunning reversal from last week’s drama, the USA Freedom Act was passed by a vote of 77-17. The bill, which passed the House overwhelmingly several weeks ago will now move forward and is likely to receive a final vote on Tuesday.

    The bill fell three votes short of the needed supermajority to advance last week but with the clock ticking on controversial provisions of the Patriot Act, supporters of NSA surveillance thought that the proposed reforms were better than letting the program expire entirely.

    Rand Paul stated that the Freedom Act will likely get passed on Tuesday.

    Wait... did we win or not? Isn't this just a 2-day repreive?

    1. Re:Is this a win? I can't tell... by Moof123 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      At least it becomes a new bill rather than a reauthorization. The stink that sticks to the yes voters is far worse for passing a new bill rather than just reauthorizing someones elses dirty work.

  4. Re:so what by amiga3D · · Score: 3, Insightful

    At least now the pretense will be gone.

  5. Useful technique by Okian+Warrior · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So he did one thing you agree with. The rest of his profile is just bat shit crazy.

    That's a useful technique - agreeing or conceding the immediate issue, while making nebulous unsupported statements about everything else. Look to see this for the next year or so. "I agree with him on this issue, but everything else is crazy".

    ...problem is, that "agreeing on this one issue" seems to happen a lot. Like, for most issues.

    Who do you recommend as an alternative? (And did they, by any chance, support the Patriot act?)

    1. Re:Useful technique by NoKaOi · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Who do you recommend as an alternative? (And did they, by any chance, support the Patriot act?)

      Bernie Sanders, who voted against the PATRIOT act and its reauthorization.

    2. Re:Useful technique by Okian+Warrior · · Score: 5, Funny

      Who do you recommend as an alternative? (And did they, by any chance, support the Patriot act?)

      Bernie Sanders, who voted against the PATRIOT act and its reauthorization.

      Voting against the Patriot act was a good thing, but everything else Bernie Sanders he stands for is just batshit crazy.

  6. Forward emails and calls until fixed? by bsharitt · · Score: 5, Funny

    In order to keep America safe, does anyone know where I can send my emails and phone records to until this whole misunderstanding is resolved? I'd hate for a terrorist to get me because my information was private.

    1. Re:Forward emails and calls until fixed? by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 4, Insightful

      In order to keep America safe, does anyone know where I can send my emails and phone records to until this whole misunderstanding is resolved? I'd hate for a terrorist to get me because my information was private.

      Don't worry - they're almost certainly still doing it. They just won't be bothering with any FISA rubber stamps or procedural filings.

      I mean, come on. They obviously weren't concerned even with the Constitution up to this point in time; why would they start worrying about more ephemeral congressional votes now?

      --
      #DeleteChrome
    2. Re:Forward emails and calls until fixed? by rgbatduke · · Score: 4, Funny

      Well, if you have anything really juicy in there -- a bit of porn, some records of your cocaine transactions, maybe some private account numbers and your social security number, you can always send them to me. I'll make sure there are no terrorists hiding under your bed.

      And of course, I'm completely trustworthy.

      My address:

      John Doe
      Secret Agent for U.N.C.L.E.
      Hiding Under Your Bed (but I'm a nice guy, not a terrorist, and there isn't any more room under here)

      In fact, don't bother sending them. I've already got them. And BTW, you snore...

      --
      Even when the experts all agree, they may well be mistaken. --- Bertrand Russell.
  7. Re:Not usually an (R) but... by ganjadude · · Score: 3, Insightful

    couldnt be any worse than the current "progressive" and previous neocon

    --
    have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
  8. I feel proud as an American! by Taco+Cowboy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I have been an American citizen for over 30 years ever since I took my oath back in the 1980's

    This is the day I can say that I feel proud as an American for at the very least the politicians in Washington D.C., for once, are doing something that the PEOPLE want them to do --- to kill that goddamn draconian bill that allows the government of the United States of America to act much like a totalitarian regime

    I think I am not the only one in America who will keep note of who is voting to keep American under the dictatorship of Obama - and we will make sure that all the supporters of dictator Obama will get booted from the Capitol Hill

    --
    Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
    1. Re:I feel proud as an American! by fortfive · · Score: 5, Informative

      . . . under the dictatorship of Obama - and we will make sure that all the supporters of dictator Obama will get booted from the Capitol Hill

      Wait, is this sarcasm? You're gunning for the funny mod, right?

      Because, A., the PATRIOT Act (writing the word "patriot" in reference to these orwellian measures makes my stomach turn, but that's not what I'm talking about here) was promulgated by Cheney Rumsfeld Bush and Co., and passed under their stern, wagging fingers, and, B., Obama operates from the White House, whereas it is the Congress whose building is Capitol Hill.

      I'm confused because Paragraph 2 is an accurate representation of the current state of affairs. I mean, Obama is a far sight short of his promises, much like most Democrats these days, and totally wrong on this issue, but he is way less of a totalitarian/authoritarian than CRB executive was. And, at least one or two of his policies are meant for the benefit of the Plebs.

    2. Re:I feel proud as an American! by fustakrakich · · Score: 5, Insightful

      :-) Which PEOPLE are you talking about?

      "If you're not doing anything wrong, what are you worried about?" said Tom Charlton, 64, a retired sales training manager for a tire company, who was first in line at a book-signing with Paul in Davenport. "If this can stop one attack, it's worth infringing on legal citizens' rights."...

      "I don't want the mall to get bombed because they didn't get the information they needed," said [Vivian] Martin...

      Sally Cram, 62, said after leaving a town hall meeting with Sen. Charles E. Grassley (R-Iowa) that she supports the NSA program because "I'm a person who believes our government tells us the truth."...

      These are the American citizens who keep this stuff alive, because they believe... It doesn't matter if Rand Paul is occasionally right. Being "right" has very little to do with anything.

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    3. Re:I feel proud as an American! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I have been an American citizen for over 30 years ever since I took my oath back in the 1980's

      This is the day I can say that I feel proud as an American for at the very least the politicians in Washington D.C., for once, are doing something that the PEOPLE want them to do --- to kill that goddamn draconian bill that allows the government of the United States of America to act much like a totalitarian regime

      I think I am not the only one in America who will keep note of who is voting to keep American under the dictatorship of Obama - and we will make sure that all the supporters of dictator Obama will get booted from the Capitol Hill

      Blame Obama? Thats the punchline to this joke of yours? It isn't funny, because it is predictable and wrong , and at this point.. pointless.

      I am proud to be an American, but for real reasons, not because of the thinly veiled and predictable power grabbing and posturing going on in the Senate leading up to the 2016 election cycle. Let's break down your delusions here one by one so we can tease apart the cluster-fsck of convoluted pseudo-logic that comprises your post:

      I have been an American citizen for over 30 years ever since I took my oath back in the 1980's

      I take from this you mean to imply that you are an immigrant and trying to position yourself as someone who has an outside perspective to the "unwashed masses" of us who have elected Obama not once but twice. Welcome to America! You do realize that the people you are talking up, namely the Republican party have repeatedly tried and tried again to make it so that people like you cannot immigrate to the US, to close down the borders and make it so that America is a "closed society" which goes against the principles of the founding fathers and the very principles that have repeatedly made this country a world power, namely it's diversity. This makes me start to doubt the truth of your claim of being an immigrant, the contradiction of ideas you present paints the larger picture that you are just saying this to try to make it look like you are one who "should" be a supporter of Obama, who has, despite being undermined by the Republican controlled Congress and Senate, worked around the clock in his term to keep America diverse and open and a free society.. but this is just the beginning of the mess of conflicting ideas you present here.. we continue with your convoluted points...

      This is the day I can say that I feel proud as an American for at the very least the politicians in Washington D.C., for once, are doing something that the PEOPLE want them to do --- to kill that goddamn draconian bill that allows the government of the United States of America to act much like a totalitarian regime

      It becomes clear here that you get 100% of your news from FOX, which reinforces the conclusion you are not an immigrant, because why wouldn't you be getting some of your news from BBC or CBC or some other actually "Fair and Balanced" news network that actually is balanced by its very nature, not just it's contradictory, politically and religiously motivated tagline, that the PEOPLE know is just false advertising, based on actual evidence of how that news network bleats out one sided, 2 dimensional programs like "Glenn Beck" or "Bill O'Reilly" whose purpose is not news reporting, but trashing the Democratic party at every turn.. If you are actually a well informed citizen who has migrated to the US, you should know better than to buy into that crap, so It is pretty clear you are someone misrepresenting yourself to make it look like your points have more weight than they actually do. This is /. and despite idiots like you posting here, the regular posters here are intelligent and know better. You continue to dig your hole deeper and deeper though..

      I think I am not the only one in America who will keep note of who is voting to keep American under the dictat

  9. Re:so what by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 3, Funny

    what? "the romans, they go to the house??"

    --

    --
    "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
  10. Lemme ask you this ... by Taco+Cowboy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ... was promulgated by Cheney Rumsfeld Bush and Co ...

    Please spare me the history lesson, dude

    I do need to ask you a question, tho ...
     
    Who is the one coming out asking the Congress to extend the Patriot Act?

    Was it Cheney Rumsfeld Bush and Co., or was it Obama?

    --
    Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
    1. Re:Lemme ask you this ... by DarkTempes · · Score: 5, Informative

      Actually, it's Rep. F. James Sensenbrenner Jr. (R, WI-5), the same guy who sponsored the Patriot Act.

      I'm not a fan of political parties as a concept but just saying...

    2. Re:Lemme ask you this ... by anagama · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Exactly. The mantra of Blame Bush is so old and tired. Yeah, I blame Bush for what he did, and I blame Obama for making the crap Bush did the new normal, which is actually worse. GWB was seen as on the radical side of exercising presidential powers -- Obama's making that the new baseline makes reform much less likely and so Obama's presidency is ultimately even a worse disservice than GWB's was. Unless of course you want to live in a US where most all power, eventually all, lies in the Executive branch.

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    3. Re:Lemme ask you this ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      Joe Biden was the original author:

      http://www.washingtonsblog.com/2011/12/joe-biden-drafted-the-core-of-the-patriot-act-in-1995-before-the-oklahoma-city-bombing.html

    4. Re:Lemme ask you this ... by Jeremi · · Score: 4, Informative

      ... under the dictatorship of Obama ...

      Who is the one coming out asking the Congress to extend the Patriot Act?

      Was it Cheney Rumsfeld Bush and Co., or was it Obama?

      What kind of a dictator "asks" Congress for anything? A proper dictator would, you know, dictate his commands, and any Congressman who refused to rubber-stamp them would be fired, or shot (or both).

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    5. Re:Lemme ask you this ... by HairyNevus · · Score: 5, Informative

      I really can't wait until we get a new president. Then it will everyone bitching about the next one will get told to blame Obama, and then people will counter that blaming Obama is old and tired but the new president is somehow worse for not being radically different.

      You know what I really honestly and non-sarcastically can't wait for? The day when you idiots stop voting these people into power. As long as the race for presidency--as long as most every political race at every level in this country-- is between a Democrat or a Republican, that will never happen.

      --
      You were critically hit for no damage. The bruise will look nice, and maybe the scars will make good party talk.
    6. Re:Lemme ask you this ... by Mitreya · · Score: 5, Informative

      What kind of a dictator "asks" Congress for anything? A proper dictator would, you know, dictate his commands

      A clever dictator asks Congress for things he does not want, so that he can deflect the blame to Congress when they fail to pass it. You don't see presidents asking for permission about, say, drone bombings in various countries.

    7. Re:Lemme ask you this ... by cayenne8 · · Score: 3

      It's bipartisan. The thing is, they will let it expire, use that to get into office, stage or provoke another major incident, then reinstate the patriot act, only tougher. Using the excuse that getting rid of it made the country vulnerable to terrorist attack. Later the skeptics, and anti war protesters will group together and fight to stop whatever insane killing is going on. The Democrats will take credit for this and use it to get back into office. It's a tag team match between big oil and the motion picture and movie industry.

      Don't get too comfy with this.

      The Senate will likely pass the Houses "freedom act" bill that basically puts most of the Patriot act back in function, with the single difference being that the metadata will be housed at the phone companies, and a warrant will be needed for each query into it.

      Better than before, but certainly not doing away with it totally as I'd like, and start over. The other provisions for lone wolf and traveling wiretaps will be back in full force though.

      Likely this will be law again by Wednesday.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
  11. Re:Rand Paul may have done only one thing right .. by ATMAvatar · · Score: 3, Informative

    Even if that Rand Paul guy has done only one thing right that ONE THING still represents one thing MORE than all the other congress-critters (plus senate critters) on the Congressional Hill!

    While I applaud him for so openly opposing the bill, he's not the only one in Congress who has. There were 121 votes against the bill in the House.

    --
    "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety."
  12. Re:Who are the fascists?? by damn_registrars · · Score: 4, Interesting

    fascism would mean bigger federal government (as you said, centralizing power)

    Wrong. Fascism does not require a bigger federal government, in fact a larger government is generally the opposite of fascism. Fascism requires more power in the hands of fewer people. There are many ways to de-centralize power - including growing the federal government. Centralizing power - such as aspiring to the "government you can drown in a bathtub" principle - is a giant step towards fascism.

    And more power in the hands of fewer people - at the expense of the rest - is a fundamental characteristic of what both Ron and Rand support.

    if you are gonna make a statement, at least have SOMETHING to back it up

    Pretty much everything either of them have ever supported supports my statement of them being fascists - particularly if you use a definition of fascism that makes sense rather than just one that is used as a generic label and put-down for anyone who you disagree with.

    --
    Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
  13. Re:Who are the fascists?? by ChrisMaple · · Score: 4, Informative

    There are many different sorts of government that feature "extreme concentration of power in the hands of very few people", and that condition is not at all the defining characteristic of fascism (which is a particular variety of regimented society).

    Of all major politicians of the last 50 years, the Pauls stand out as the obvious promoters of freedom, enemies of regimentation and concentration of power.

    The cult has favored restructuring power in many ways to exclude many people.

    Your complete absence of understanding is on display here; the goal is to remove power because power causes abuse.

    "for I have sworn upon the altar of god eternal hostility against every form of tyranny over the mind of man." - Thomas Jefferson - illustrates the proper attitude.

    --
    Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
  14. Re:So What! A Roadmap... by TheRealHocusLocus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Does anyone really think they, the NSA, is not going to spy, with or without approval? We have no way to control them, they hold all the cards!

    The have always spied and that part will never cease. But it's time to shake them up a little.

    1. If it can and will be abused, refrain from building it in the first place.
    2. If it has been built, see that it is laid bare to the greatest extent possible and dismantled.
    3. For egregious offenses, the offending Agency must be completely disbanded, its assets liquidated, and formed anew.
    4. Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law. (only joking!)

    The United States is presently under attack, by itself, in a way even Stalin was unable to achieve given the limited technology of his time. Due to a lack of transparency and believability, a technological renaissance with (apparently) no moral compass steered by Charter, the NSA has likely deployed assets and capabilities for domestic surveillance. The following attack vectors cannot be ruled out:

    There is an unknown, possibly massive tapping of the backbone network occurring. Utah Data Center's central location is a clue. Thomas Drake, Bill Binney and Mark Klein have all come forward alleging domestic surveillance far exceeding 'telephone records'. Klein is of especial note, for it is he who revealed the existence of Room 641A in the lawsuit Heptig vs AT&T that EFF took almost to the Supreme Court, who declined to hear the case on the basis that the FISA Amendments Act of 2008 protected AT&T from liability for involvement with any illegal activities. A law passed after the lawsuit was filed. In response to it, even.

    That should make you a bit angry. We're not talking about telephone records here. We're talking about fiber splitting with drop-in access to the whole slurp. To any future despot this means that the United States may be prepared to deliver real-time private communications and databases of activity for its citizens, cradle to grave. Why the fuck would anyone want to build this thing, unless they were insane? James Bamford hinted at the possibility that NSA was 'going domestic' in his 1982 book Puzzle Palace as he suggests its interest in developing technology for bulk microwave gathering. That is to be expected as this technology was deployed worldwide. But the way they wished to go about it was a bit... peculiar:

    Another indication of NSA's "broadband sweeping of multi-circuited domestic telecommunications trunk lines," David L. Watters told the Senate Intelligence Committee [in 1978!] lies in the Agency's request for an amendment to the wiretap law that would permit NSA to engage in warrantless wiretapping "for the sole purpose of determining the capability of equipment" when such "test period shall be limited... to... ninety days." Continuing, he warned: "Let there be no misunderstanding here. There is only one category of wiretapping equipment or system which requires up to ninety days for test and adjustment, and that system is broadband electronic eavesdropping equipment, the vacuum-cleaner approach to intelligence gathering, the general search of microwave trunk lines. I make this assertion on the strength of actual experience in the electronic intelligence trade and on the strength of over twenty-five years' experience in the telecommunications profession. An ordinary, single-line wire tap requires only five minutes to adjust and test."

    NSA should not have wanted th

    --
    <blink>down the rabbit hole</blink>
  15. Re:Who are the fascists?? by Just+Another+Poster · · Score: 4, Informative

    You do not know the meaning of fascism. Instead, you're using the term as a mere epithet.

    Fascists have a view of world history in which ethnic or national groups are primary. They have a Hobbesian theory of society and the State where the nation must be reified as an individual, where disagreement and competition must be forcibly suppressed. Economic ideology is corporatist: having nothing to do with business corporations, but rather a form of guild socialism - central planning, where market competition is suppressed by the State, and sectors of society and the economy, such as agriculture, business, labor, etc. are regimented into organizations under a single governing body and forced to negotiate with each other to establish policies in the interest of each organization and the body as a whole.

  16. Re:Who are the fascists?? by dcollins · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "for I have sworn upon the altar of god eternal hostility against every form of tyranny over the mind of man." - Thomas Jefferson - illustrates the proper attitude.

    The act of owning slaves, on the other hand, not so much.

    --
    We know where leadership by an anti-intellectual "strongman" who scapegoats minorities and likes boisterous rallies goes
  17. Nonsene, both of you! by linearZ · · Score: 4, Informative

    ... was promulgated by Cheney Rumsfeld Bush and Co ...

    Who is the one coming out asking the Congress to extend the Patriot Act?

    Was it Cheney Rumsfeld Bush and Co., or was it Obama?

    This argument is exactly the argument they want. because this argument leads nowhere.

    The patriot act was promulgated by Cheney Rumsfeld Bush and Co. under a republican controlled congress. And it was backed by Obama under a democratically controlled congress, and - if not for the exception of one guy with a backbone - almost got pushed through a Republican controlled congress by a Democrat president again. So you are both right. What are your points?

    The one thing that you two probably agree with, the one thing that polls have shown like 80% if Americans agreeing with, is that the Patriot Act is nonsense and needs to be repealed. Yet, over 99% of the elected representatives seems to want the Patriot Act passed.

    Meanwhile, armchair yahoos such as yourselves are busy arguing about which politician is to blame? Balderdash! How about blaming all elected officials, except for maybe Rand Paul and Bernie Sanders? If you can only think of this through the lens of political parties, how about going with the vertebrate and invertebrate parties? I know, without their own news channels, it is hard to imagine....

    --
    Revolution is the opium of the intellectuals.
    1. Re:Nonsene, both of you! by nine-times · · Score: 3

      The one thing that you two probably agree with, the one thing that polls have shown like 80% if Americans agreeing with, is that the Patriot Act is nonsense and needs to be repealed. Yet, over 99% of the elected representatives seems to want the Patriot Act passed.

      What do you imagine this is all about, then? Why do you think there's such a discrepancy?

      My running theory is that it has nothing to do with political parties or oppression. The elected officials support the PATRIOT Act because they're cowards. They believe that the American people are stupid and fickle, and that even if 100% strongly support repealing the PATRIOT Act, those same people will still blame their elected politicians for "not doing enough" when the next terrorist attack comes.

      And they're right to believe it. There will be another successful terrorist attack. There will. Someday, under some circumstances; it's only a matter of time. And when it happens, no matter what the circumstances are, the general populace will panic, and they'll do all kinds of stupid things. And the funny thing is, you might not realize this unless you really pay attention, but the general populace has no memory. It doesn't matter how much they disapprove of the PATRIOT Act now. As soon as there's a successful terrorist attack and they're scared and confused, they'll be absolutely irate that we aren't spying on more people more often. They won't have any idea why the NSA stopped monitoring all of our phone calls, but they'll be angry at anyone involved in putting an end to it.

      I mean, if you talk to people now, nobody was ever in favor of invading Iraq. Go ahead and ask people, and they'll get upset and say they don't know why we went in, but it was a big mistake, and they always knew it was a mistake. Or they'll say they were tricked. But back when it happened, it was popular enough that representatives were afraid to oppose it. At least some of those people are mis-remembering. Same thing with all of the deregulation going on during the Clinton era, which everyone seems to have conveniently forgotten happened during Clinton's presidency. Everyone remembers that they economy grew under Clinton, but everyone forgets all the deregulation and Walmartization going on at the time.

      People have no memory and no principles, so they're just running off of whatever they're feeling at the time. Our elected officials tend to base their policies on irrational fear and bigotry because those are the most consistent and trustworthy feelings.

  18. When all the choices on the ballot by waspleg · · Score: 5, Insightful

    are carefully selected by corporate money/the rich who own them then there is no real change since it's the same hand up the ass of both party puppets.

  19. Except of course... by MitchDev · · Score: 3, Insightful

    this won't stop the NSA and FBI, CIA, etc from continuing their unconstitutional surveillance state...

  20. Re:Who are the fascists?? by totallyarb · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The act of owning slaves, on the other hand, not so much.

    I stand open to correction here, but my understanding was that Jefferson inherited the vast majority of the slaves that he owned, and his only known purchases of slaves were in order to reunite family members who had been separated by sales to different masters. It's true that he didn't free many of his slaves, but that was (apparently) because life for an ex-slave in Virginia in the 18th century was arguably nastier than being nominally "owned" by a caring owner. He also attempted to pass laws through the Virginia state legislature that would have abolished slavery (his bill was defeated), and included an anti-slavery diatribe in the original Declaration of Independence, which was cut by the committee before it was published.

    When you get right down to it, there is not a lot one man - even a President of the United States - can do when the culture of the time is against him. But he seems to have done about as much as he could in the circumstances, so criticising him from a perspective more than two centuries later seems a bit unfair.

    --
    -- Note to Mods: There is a good reason there's no "-1 Disagree" option. --