Showing posts with label FISA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FISA. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Get Active: Add Your Name to ACLU Ad


I'm going to give an effort to make this my last post on the FISA vote for the day. I know that I'm a bit more passionate about it than some people are. But if you're like me, and you were angered by this decision, here's a way to vent, just a little bit:

[From Email]

Congress just compromised your rights by passing the FISA Amendments Act.

Today elected officials in Washington sold out the Constitution -- again.

Cowed by the Bush administration's pre-election scare tactics, the Senate passed privacy-stealing FISA legislation undermining your Fourth Amendment rights.

It's outrageous, unconstitutional and un-American. That's why the ACLU is prepared to challenge this law the moment George Bush signs it -- and you can rest assured, they'll be meeting our lawyers in court.

Our lawsuit will send a powerful message to those in Congress who played it safe when they had the opportunity to defend the Constitution. You can join the ACLU in sending that message by signing on to our ad letting Congress know that if they won't stand up for freedom, you and the ACLU will.

We'll be taking out a full-page ad in a major national newspaper announcing our lawsuit and expressing our outrage at this abandonment of Constitutional principles. Our goal is to run an ad that contains the names of tens of thousands of Americans who believe in the Constitution and want Congress to hear us loud and clear: next time, stand up for our rights.

ACLU to Sue Over FISA Vote


Image from source, Raw Story

OK, feeling even better now. I still hate that the Senate (including 1/3 of Democrats) voted for the FISA bill. But maybe it's fixable. Cross your fingers.

[Excerpt]

ACLU, EFF will challenge FISA update in court

As the Senate voted to endorse a Bush-administration backed plan to expand its surveillance authority and grant retroactive legal immunity to telecommunications companies that facilitated warrantless wiretapping, the American Civil Liberties Union unveiled plans to challenge the new law in court. . .

Read more at: Raw Story

Sen. Russ Feingold on FISA Vote

OK, now that I've vented my spleen regarding the disastrous FISA vote, I get to feel a little more hopeful about the whole deal. Senator Russ Feingold, an ardent opponent of the FISA bill appeared with guest host, Rachel Maddow on tonight's Countdown with Keith Olbermann. I trust Feingold's opinion, and if he feels hopeful about this thing (provided Barack Obama is elected in the fall), I guess I can feel hopeful too.

FISA Bill Passed by Senate, Liberals Pissed


Yep, I said it, right in the headline. I'm pissed off. We have a Democratic majority in the Senate, and a bill that according to Constitutional scholar, Jonathan Turley, "eviscerates" the 4th amendment, passed anyway. As far as Turley, and myself, and many other liberals are concerned, the purpose of this bill was not the public interest. It was to cover a lot of political ass, and--for reasons we still don't fully understand--protect big corporations.

Remind me again, is the President and Congress supposed to defend the corporations, or is it the Constitution? Whatever, they're both C-words, right? We can only guess at the reasons that 1/3 of Democrats voted for this travesty, along with--what--all of the Republicans? Blackmail, backroom deals, fear of being labelled unpatriotic. The result in any case, is that President Bush, with an approval rating in the high twenties at best, got exactly what he wanted from a Democratic Congress. Here are just a couple of things that suck about this:

- 70% of the Senate does not know what the telecommunications companies are being pardoned for. They've been given retroactive immunity for breaking the law, and 70 Senators do not know what those infractions even were.

- Warrantless wiretapping by the Bush Administration did not begin after 9/11, it began in February 2001. And yet, this change in the FISA law is being justified as a response to 9/11. It's just a flat lie.

There's more, but I'm done. I'm pissed, but I'm done. For now.

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Turley: 4th Amendment to Be Eviscerated Tomorrow

Constitutional scholar, Johnathon Turley was on Countdown with Keith Olbermann tonight with guest host (and Greenlee Gazette favorite) Rachel Maddow, discussing the likely passing tomorrow of the FISA bill in the Senate. If you're wondering what all the fuss is about, if you can't understand why I've been harping on this for months and months. . .watch this clip.

And as a side note, where are all of those "gun clingers" who were high-fiving each other over last week's Supreme Court decision on the 2nd amendment? Is that the only amendment that matters?

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Stand With Christopher Dodd Against Telecom Immunity


It's a shame that someone like Senator Christopher Dodd never really had a shot at the Presidency. While I'm eager to see Barack Obama become President--and I'm willing to give him the benefit of the doubt about his FISA bill stance--Dodd is one of the few Senators out there actively trying to beat this thing.

If you feel like I do, join him in his fight to head this thing off. It may be futile, but you'll feel a little better.

[From Christopher Dodd's call to action letter]

For the last nine months, when retroactive immunity has surfaced, we have been able to delay its passage.

We were able to stop it in December because I had an army behind me.

Two months later, it stalled again -- this time in the House.And last week, we managed to delay action one last time.

But when the Senate returns from the July 4th recess, we will vote on FISA legislation that includes retroactive immunity for telecom companies that may have illegally helped the Bush administration spy without warrant.

It's a bad bill and we need action to stop retroactive immunity from becoming law. I've introduced an amendment with Senator Feingold to strip immunity from the bill. This amendment has the support of Majority Leader Reid and Senator Obama, but it needs 51 votes to pass.

Will you sign on as a citizen co-sponsor of our amendment?

Sign on now!

Together, we can prevent this assault on our Constitution. Let's do it one more time. With your help, we can stop the further erosion of the rule of law.

We'll be in touch soon.

Chris Dodd

Monday, June 30, 2008

Keith Olbermann's Special Comment: Obama & FISA

Still think that Countdown with Keith Olbermann and MSNBC (or Greenlee Gazette, for that matter) are "in the tank" for Barack Obama? You might think otherwise after watching his most recent "Special Comment."

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Barack Obama's Not-so Cozy Relationship with Bloggers


Image from source, Huffington Post

In the many-pronged attacks on Barack Obama, a constant one from the right is that he's far-left, and in the pocket of "the MoveOn.orgs." People who actually read left-wing blogs know that this is nonsense.

The latest diversion from the left-wing "netroots" is Obama's decision to vote for the "compromise" FISA/telecom retroactive immunity/warrantless wiretaps bill. The netroots don't like it. I don't like it. Not one little bit. It's not enough to dampen my enthusiasm for his election, but it's enough for me to want him to explain what is in that bill that would "protect America."

[Excerpt]


Only weeks into the general election campaign and already a notable tension is beginning to materialize within the Democratic Party. At question is Sen. Barack Obama's relationship with the progressive netroots, the online community that helped aid the Senator's rise to the presidential nomination, but has since seemingly played second fiddle in terms of courted constituencies. . .

Read more at: Huffington Post

Democrats Who Voted for FISA Getting Telecom Cash?


Photo from Huffington Post

There is a basic difference--in my opinion--between right-leaning media outlets (radio, magazines, blogs), and left-leaning ones. The right will typically stand by a corrupt conservative politician, offering excuses, playing devil's advocate; unless that politician confesses or is convicted. Even then, their guilt is often downplayed. On the left, there is a less strenuous devil's advocate play, and when the politician seems to be dirty they are often called on it.

Ronald Reagan's "Eleventh Commandment," Thou shalt not speak ill of any fellow Republican, doesn't seem to have a counterpart on the left. Ask a Democrat to defend Bill Clinton's actions, and you'll likely get some background--that the Republicans were out to impeach him for whatever they could find, and that the action was silly--but you won't get much defending. Same for William Jefferson's infamous "money in the freezer" story.

And now comes the FISA bill, with the retroactive immunity for telecom companies that acted illegally on the President's orders, and allows warrantless wiretapping. Liberals are severely bent that any Democrat would vote for such a thing. And those that do are openly suspected--by liberals--to either be "in the tank" for the telecoms, covering their asses for what they were implicit in, or that they're being blackmailed for their votes.

All three scenarios are strong possibilities, but the first now seems to have some evidence to back it up. Take a look.

[Excerpt]

Dems who flipped on FISA immunity see more telecom cash

House Democrats who flipped their votes to support retroactive immunity for telecom companies in last week’s FISA bill took thousands of dollars more from phone companies than Democrats who consistently voted against legislation with an immunity provision, according to an analysis by MAPLight.org. . .

Read more at: Politico

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Chris Dodd & Russ Feingold Fighting FISA Bill


Image from source, AOL News

Say what you will about the Congress in general and the Senate in specific, there are a few good ones in there still fighting for us. Chris Dodd and Russ Feingold are vowing to fight passage of the FISA bill, and good for them.

The question of why Democrats would cave on the new FISA bill is rich fodder for speculation. My favorite is the cover your ass theory, where discovery of exactly what has been done would implicate not only Republicans, but also a good chunk of Democrats.

In the days after September 11, 2001, any effort to fight George W. Bush's agenda was met with variations of the "unpatriotic" or "America hater" attacks. So, Democrats--by and large--went along. Some grudgingly, some willingly. And now that the mood of the country is considerably different, some of those actions could come back to haunt Democrats. Tough. The warrantless wiretapping and retroactive immunity for telecom companies defiled the Constitution and many other laws. The single greatest duty of Congress--not to mention the President--is to defend and uphold the Constitution. Suck it up guys. And good on you, Senators Feingold and Dodd. I hope you prevail.

[Excerpt]

Feingold, Dodd to Fight FISA

After Democratic Senators Chris Dodd and Russ Feingold issued a strongly worded statement opposing the FISA bill that passed the House of Representatives yesterday, rumors of a filibuster quickly began to circulate. But nowhere in the actual statement did it say that Dodd and Feingold would filibuster the legislation. . .

Read more at: AOL News

Saturday, June 21, 2008

More on House's FISA Vote (I'm Still Not Over It)

I've been taking it kind of easy today, at least as it relates to the blog. Laundry, bug spraying, hair cut, grocery shopping. . .all taken care of, and by early in the day too! Since about 2:00 or so, I've been reading The Mormon Murders, an old true-crime book from the 80s, and it's fascinating. But I figure it's time to knuckle down, and put a few things on the ol' blog.

As my mother sarcastically said, "I'm sure they're hanging on your every word." Thanks, Mom.

I'm still pretty grumbly about the House of Representative's FISA/warrantless wiretaps/retroactive immunity for telecoms vote. Too grumbly to say much about it, but here's a great video encapsulating the ruling, and what's wrong with it.

Friday, June 20, 2008

House Gives Bush Wiretaps and Telecoms Immunity


This is a frustrating, exasperating, irritating, maddening, stupefyingly dumb ass move by Congress. The Senate still has to follow suit for it to go through, but I worry that they will. It's being called a compromise, but many are calling it capitulation. It is really neither of those. It's a cover-your-ass move for Congress, plain and simple. If they made this into the big issue it deserves to be, many Congresscritters (on both sides) would have big problems. So, they've taken out their Sharpies, and they're blacking out parts of the Constitution. Nice.

[Excerpt]

House votes to expand Bush wiretap powers, telecom immunity

Less than 24 hours after introducing a controversial measure to expand President Bush's authority to spy on Americans, the Democratic-controlled House of Representatives on Friday voted to approve the administration- and Republican-supported bill, sending it to the Senate where it will likely be adopted. . .

Read more at: Raw Story

Thursday, June 19, 2008

Off the Hook: Olbermann & Turley on FISA Compromise

If my rant about the Democrats' capitulation on the FISA/telecom immunity bill wasn't good enough to keep your interest, here is a much better take on it. For all the talk about Countdown with Keith Olbermann being liberally biased, please check out the major criticism of not only George W. Bush and Republicans, but Democrats as well.

Telecom Immunity a Done Deal?


Photo of Steny Hoyer from source, Raw Story

This story has been exhausting for liberal bloggers like me. For months and months, we've been writing, reading, calling and emailing our representatives, telling them "No immunity!" Congress now seems prepared to "compromise" (read: capitulate) to the Bush administrations' wishes, allowing them to continue to wiretap without warrants. And the biggie: retroactive immunity for the telecom companies who aided Bush illegally.

Not incidentally, such a ruling would also insulate Bush himself from further scrutiny in this matter. And I suspect that some members of Congress from both sides of the aisle want to cover their own butts as well. Disgusting.

[Excerpt]

Deal reached on wiretap expansion, telecom immunity

Wary of making the debate between liberty and security into a campaign issue, Congressional Democrats appear ready to retreat in their years-long effort to instill some sort of accountability on the Bush administration and its enablers in the telecommunications industry for their extra-legal surveillance of Americans. . .

Read more at: Raw Story


Tuesday, April 1, 2008

Mukasey's Statements About 9/11 and Wiretaps

Keith Olbermann and Rachel Maddow put this very important story into perspective. Well worth a look.

Did US Have Attack Warning Before 9/11?


Photo from source, Raw Story

Somebody is lying now, or somebody was lying then, or so this story would lead us to believe. Why can't it be both?

[Excerpt]

Mukasey hints US had attack warning before 9/11

When Attorney General Mukasey delivered a speech last week demanding that Congress grant the president warrantless eavesdropping powers and telecom immunity, the question and answer session afterwards included one extraordinary but little-noticed claim.

Mukasey argued that officials "shouldn't need a warrant when somebody with a phone in Iraq picks up a phone and calls somebody in the United States because that's the call that we may really want to know about. . .

Read more at: Raw Story



Bush Backing Down on FISA Telecom Immunity?


Photo from source, Raw Story

Could The Decider just be getting tired of all of this? Maybe he's feeling a little lame-ducky, who knows? What's known is that the retroactive immunity he wants for telecom companies is really to protect his own backside. It's possible he's just going to play the odds. After all, when the Bush Administration is finally put to sleep, will there be a lot of interest in Congress and the courts to go after him? I would hope so, but I'd wager Bush will go out with a whimper, not a splash--and will not have to pay for his misdeeds. Unless you believe in karma, or maybe. . .could it be. . .Satan!?!

[Excerpt]

Bush backing down in FISA fight?

After months of using politically loaded rhetoric and hyping "bogus" terror threats to push Congress to give him the domestic spying bill he's demanding, President Bush seems to be backing down.

The Wall Street Journal
reports Tuesday that the White House is softening its hard-line approach to updating the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. . .

Read more at: Raw Story



Sunday, March 16, 2008

Dennis Kucinich and Congress' Secret Session

Congress has only gone into "secret session" six times ever. For some reason, the FISA/telecom retroactive immunity discussion was deemed important enough to warrant such a session. Dennis Kucinich would not agree to participate, and here explains why.

It's very interesting if you're into politics, maybe not so much if you're not. But whatever you do, stop the video before they get into the folk singing. . .that was even too much for me.

Friday, March 14, 2008

House Passes FISA Amendments Act

I must say, I'm impressed. Nancy Pelosi and the House of Representatives continues to stare Bush in the eye without blinking. Well, on this issue at least. No retroactive immunity for the telecoms. Of course, Bush threatens to veto. Keep it up, Congress!

[Excerpt]



House Passes FISA Amendments Act

The House has just passed the
House amendment to the Senate amendment to H.R. 3773, to amend the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 to establish a procedure for authorizing certain acquisitions of foreign intelligence, and for other purposes, by a vote of 213-197-1. The revised House legislation to amend FISA grants new authorities for conducting electronic surveillance against foreign targets while preserving the requirement that the government obtain an individualized FISA court order, based on probable cause, when targeting Americans at home or abroad. The House bill also strongly enhances oversight of the Administration’s surveillance activities. Finally, the House bill does not provide retroactive immunity for telecom companies but allows the courts to determine whether lawsuits should proceed. . .

Read more at: The Gavel

Sunday, March 2, 2008

George Bush in Epic Battle to Cover His Ass


I've posted a lot--a whole lot--of articles, stories and editorials about George W. Bush, FISA, the Protect America AT&T Act, warrantless wiretaps, and all of the political machinations involved. Along the way, I've been angry, snarky and incredulous that the media is still reporting Bush's take on it all as legitimate.

Finally, I've found an editorial that captures that frustration. It's also angry, snarky and incredulous. Not to mention contains verbiage I don't generally use, but is wholly appropriate given the circumstances.

[Excerpt]

George Bush Is Engaged in an Epic Battle to Cover His Ass by Allan Uthman, Buffalo Beast

What the hell is going on here? When you compare the truths of this dispute with the rhetoric from the White House and its mouthpieces, there's really no other conclusion than that this country has gone f***ing bonkers. Reality and public perception don't even share a zip code anymore. [snip]

And like-minded jackasses in the media, like Bill Kristol on Fox News Sunday, still have the inconceivable gall to say things like, "I think it's kind of unbelievable, frankly, that -- it's a judgment call, we don't know -- not to give the administration the benefit of the doubt." [snip]

The benefit of the doubt? A judgment call? Sorry Bill, but f*** you. Your judgment's been shit; your President's judgment's been shit, and both of you are documented liars. So forgive the hell out of the rest of us if there's no doubt to benefit from when it comes to whether the president is a f***ing fraud. The entire administration is a fraud. Every department is a fraud, staffed by fraudulent people, hostile to its stated mission and intent on it's nullification, by death or paralysis. . .

Read more (with commentary), at: Democratic Underground
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