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cajunspur
06-18-2008, 09:49 AM
I asked these to Supergirl and she couldnt answer them. She just said she is scared for a hostile takeover.

How has the government interfered in your daily life in the past 8 years? Have you not been able to express yourself in the past 8 years?

I am looking for specific examples. I ask this because a lot of people talk like our government is turning into big brother, but can't give specific examples how. If people really have been affected, I am open to hearing them.

AZLouis
06-18-2008, 10:07 AM
I can't give you any specific examples. Maybe we can ask the Feds to replay all my phone conversations, emails, texts, and other communications they recorded illegally?

clambake
06-18-2008, 10:08 AM
actions and behavior. you can't discount the future. republican direction has sent our country spiralling into free-fall.

big brothers action certainly can have an affect on tomorrow.

you can't have my kid. right now, this country isn't worthy.

Extra Stout
06-18-2008, 10:11 AM
I really enjoy how I always get to go through the special inspection with the metal-detector wand now at the airport. As best as I can tell, I made it onto some watch list because of my taste for Mediterranean food. If I ever buy a keffiyeh, I assume I'll be grounded from flying.

spurster
06-18-2008, 01:22 PM
I am slowly, but steadily, becoming more careful of what I say and do because privacy has been eroded by corporations and government. I am seriously considering subscribing to a proxy server to avoid the spying.

balli
06-18-2008, 01:32 PM
I asked these to Supergirl and she couldnt answer them. She just said she is scared for a hostile takeover.

How has the government interfered in your daily life in the past 8 years? Have you not been able to express yourself in the past 8 years?


I used to live in a canyon home just outside of SLC. One night there was manhunt for a guy who did a hit and run and took off on foot into the canyon. I was sitting in my living room with a couple roomates watching basketball. A cop came up on my porch, looked through the window and saw a tobacco hookah that we had in the corner.

Without knocking he opened our door, came into our house, detained us without saying why, called backup, proceeded to search our entire house and then arrested us for marijauna possession. I couldn't afford to bail myself out at the time and I spent 3 days in jail for a charge that was eventually dropped because the judge agreed that the fucking pig had absolutely no probable cause to just come into our house without permission.

My governement, came to my house, looked in my window, opened the door, searched my possesions, put me in cuffs and took 72 hours of my life and locked it in a 10x5 cell. And in the end... by law, they had absolutely no right or reason to do so. Doesn't matter, they did it anyway.

cajunspur
06-18-2008, 01:35 PM
I used to live in a canyon home just outside of SLC. One night there was manhunt for a guy who did a hit and run and took off on foot into the canyon. I was sitting in my living room with a couple roomates watching basketball. A cop came up on my porch, looked through the window and saw a tobacco hookah that we had in the corner.

Without knocking he opened our door, came into our house, detained us without saying why, called backup, proceeded to search our entire house and then arrested us for marijauna possession. I couldn't afford to bail myself out at the time and I spent 3 days in jail for a charge that was eventually dropped because the judge agreed that the fucking pig had absolutely no probable cause to just come into our house without permission.

My governement, came to my house, looked in my window, opened the door, put me in cuffs and took 72 hours of my life and locked it in a 10x5 cell. And in the end... by law, they had absolutely no right or reason to do so. Doesn't matter, they did it anyway.

That sucks if that happened.Do you think it was because of George Bush that that cop did that? This may have been a dream though as your memory could be failing you because of your extensive pot smoking.

101A
06-18-2008, 01:35 PM
I used to live in a canyon home just outside of SLC. One night there was manhunt for a guy who did a hit and run and took off on foot into the canyon. I was sitting in my living room with a couple roomates watching basketball. A cop came up on my porch, looked through the window and saw a tobacco hookah that we had in the corner.

Without knocking he opened our door, came into our house, detained us without saying why, called backup, proceeded to search our entire house and then arrested us for marijauna possession. I couldn't afford to bail myself out at the time and I spent 3 days in jail for a charge that was eventually dropped because the judge agreed that the fucking pig had absolutely no probable cause to just come into our house without permission.

My governement, came to my house, looked in my window, opened the door, put me in cuffs and took 72 hours of my life and locked it in a 10x5 cell. And in the end... by law, they had absolutely no right or reason to do so. Doesn't matter, they did it anyway.

The Federal government?

Sounds like a local cop out of control. Congratulations on beating a pot rap, however.

Was that Bush's fault. The Cop broke the fucking law!!! It just have easily been the guy they were looking for. Would that be Bush's fault, too?

balli
06-18-2008, 01:39 PM
The Federal government?

Sounds like a local cop out of control. Congratulations on beating a pot rap, however.

Was that Bush's fault. The Cop broke the fucking law!!! It just have easily been the guy they were looking for. Would that be Bush's fault, too?

Pfffff, did I say it was Bush's fault??? Did cajunspur ask for examples related specifically to federal governement? In both cases, the answer is no.

He asked if govt has interfered with my personal life. The answer is yes. A governmental agent, an executive one, robbed me of three days of my life after intruding into my home and privacy.

balli
06-18-2008, 01:46 PM
That sucks if that happened.Do you think it was because of George Bush that that cop did that? This may have been a dream though as your memory could be failing you because of your extensive pot smoking.

Please. I'm far from lacking in intellect and I've been high multiple times a day, almost every day, for 6 years. Get off your high horse about that shit becaue really, you have no clue what you're talking about. And BTW, I don't even want to get into a debate about the merits or conversely the dangers of smoking marijuana, so please don't turn this thread into a referendum.

And no, I don't think it was George Bush's fault at all. I do think racist conservatives outlawed marijuana for ridiculous reasons though. And I think the reason it's still illegal is because the conservative among us fear it and propogate ridiculous myths about it. Of course I don't blame Bush though. If that's what you were getting at you should have made that point in the OP.

101A
06-18-2008, 01:47 PM
Pfffff, did I say it was Bush's fault??? Did cajunspur ask for examples related specifically to federal governement? In both cases, the answer is no.

He asked if govt has interfered with my personal life. The answer is yes. A governmental agent, an executive one, robbed me of three days of my life after intruding into my home and privacy.

The government didn't. An individual did.

Wild Cobra
06-18-2008, 07:41 PM
My governement, came to my house, looked in my window, opened the door, searched my possesions, put me in cuffs and took 72 hours of my life and locked it in a 10x5 cell. And in the end... by law, they had absolutely no right or reason to do so. Doesn't matter, they did it anyway.
Purhaps you should file a civil complaint against him. Not only for violating your rights, but for not doing his job of protecting the community. They guy was on a manhunt, yet he took the time to harrass you instead? Shouldn't he have been looking for the suspect?

At a minumum, I think you should suggest to the police department he be repremanded for stopping the manhunt. Was he afraid or something? Have to find an excuse to take a safer bust?

Wild Cobra
06-18-2008, 07:50 PM
I had a problem with the state of Oregon some time back. I'm divorced, and I was paying Child Support. When I was laid off, my ex files for the Oregon Health Plan. They were aggressive in getting into our lives. Even though I still regularly paid Child Support, they started garnishing my pay at the new job I had (that didn't provide health care.) I didn't like it because they were implying I was irresponsible. That really wasn't the big issue.

Once they took the money out of my pay, it took about three weeks for them to process it and get the money to my ex. Sometimes, they would fuck up, and she wouldn't get it for six weeks. Then she would call me, call social services, then you know how government is. The left hand doesn't talk to the right... They accused me and my employer they weren't getting the money to send to her! I would have to take my pay statements and show them the deductions. This really got to be a pain.

In the end, they took out more than they ever gave her once the child support ended. They sill have money that I finally gave up on trying to track.

ElNono
06-18-2008, 07:59 PM
I had an incident that is closely related to the data-sharing and spying going on.
Unfortunately, I'm legally unable to further expand on it. What I can tell you is that both my wife and me gone through very stressful times for the couple of months that went on, and don't wish it on anybody. Luckily, everything worked out for the best.

scott
06-18-2008, 08:21 PM
Are we only referring to civil rights issues?

Because I can tell you that the decline in the value of the dollar has had an impact on every single American, and a significant amount of the blame for that must go to our wreckless fiscal policies. I personally don't care which politician you blame for that... I blame all of them.

PixelPusher
06-18-2008, 08:42 PM
The government didn't. An individual did.

Ah, the "bad apple" defense. I expect that one will get a thorough workout in the years to come.

Nbadan
06-19-2008, 12:39 AM
Personally, I'm tired of our country killing innocent people...


NADLER: Colonel Wilkerson, in your prepared testimony, you write that “as I compiled my dossier for Secretary Powell, and as I did further research, and as my views grew firmer and firmer I had to reread that memo (of February 7, 2002), “I needed to balance in my own mind the overwhelming evidence that my own government had sanctioned abuse and torture, which at its worse had led to the murder of 25 detainees and at least 100 detainee deaths. We have murder at least 25 people in detention. That was the clear low point of the evidence.” Your testimony said 100 detainees have died in detention; do you believe the 25 of those were in effect murdered?

WILKERSON: Mr. Chairman, I think the number’s actually higher than that now. Last time I checked it was 108, and the total number that were declared homicides by the military services, or by the CIA, or others doing investigations, CID, and so forth — was 25, 26, 27.

NADLER: Were declared homicides?

WILKERSON: Right, starting as early as December 2001 in Afghanistan.

NADLER: And these were homicides committed by people engaged in interrogations?

WILKERSON: Or in guarding prisoners, or something like that. People who were in detention.

NADLER: They were in detention, not trying to escape or anything, declared homicides by our own authorities.

Think Progress (http://thinkprogress.org/2008/06/18/ex-state-dept-official-hundreds-of-detainees-died-in-us-custody-at-least-25-murdered)

If we don't take responsibility ourselves and clean house, the rest of the world will....

cajunspur
06-19-2008, 08:20 AM
Personally, I'm tired of our country killing innocent people...


Think Progress (http://thinkprogress.org/2008/06/18/ex-state-dept-official-hundreds-of-detainees-died-in-us-custody-at-least-25-murdered)

If we don't take responsibility ourselves and clean house, the rest of the world will....

So this is an example of the government interfering with your everyday personal life?

cajunspur
06-19-2008, 08:20 AM
Are we only referring to civil rights issues?

Because I can tell you that the decline in the value of the dollar has had an impact on every single American, and a significant amount of the blame for that must go to our wreckless fiscal policies. I personally don't care which politician you blame for that... I blame all of them.

I am referring more to things like the Patriot Act that everyone freaks out about.

boutons_
06-19-2008, 08:39 AM
"The government didn't. An individual did."

Just fucking wow. The govt is perfect and innocent, govt employees? who GAF?

We are now learing that it wasn't a few bad apples at Abu Ghraib but that torture was ordered by Rumsfeld and CIA.

The hookah-spotting cop was not a bad apple but representative of a rotten police system. Having incredible and increasing FASCIST powers (the basic principle of which is the anti-Constitutional rule of "institutions crushes citizens"), the govt is to be assumed GUILTY of abuse of citizens and must prove its innocence to keep.

The fascism is that the police/corporatist state is now totally out of control of the citizens, who have no recourse for correcting the police state, to make the police state serve the citizens rather than crush the citizens.

yes, yes, I know, I'm pro-terrorist. GFY, all you fascists.

101A
06-19-2008, 08:57 AM
"The government didn't. An individual did."

Just fucking wow. The govt is perfect and innocent, govt employees? who GAF?

We are now learing that it wasn't a few bad apples at Abu Ghraib but that torture was ordered by Rumsfeld and CIA.

The hookah-spotting cop was not a bad apple but representative of a rotten police system. Having incredible and increasing FASCIST powers (the basic principle of which is the anti-Constitutional rule of "institutions crushes citizens"), the govt is to be assumed GUILTY of abuse of citizens and must prove its innocence to keep.

The fascism is that the police/corporatist state is now totally out of control of the citizens, who have no recourse for correcting the police state, to make the police state serve the citizens rather than crush the citizens.

yes, yes, I know, I'm pro-terrorist. GFY, all you fascists.

So, when postal workers shoot the place up...that's the government?

Dude had pot; a cop violated his rights; dude WALKED. What part of...govt. EMPLOYEE fucked up, EVERYONE knows it, and that's that, can't you understand? In your perfect world, HOW do you prevent what happened from happening? What would you change about govt. policy to keep an employee of the govt. from exerting free will and breaking that policy? Mind control?

FromWayDowntown
06-19-2008, 08:59 AM
My federal government put my name on a no-fly list for more than a year without any justification as to me personally. It cost me plenty of additional exposure to TSA security measures and allowed me to spend literally hours of additional time at airports proving that I have never had any terroristic intentions.

Oh, Gee!!
06-19-2008, 09:07 AM
The government didn't. An individual did.

under those circumstances, the government agency is responsible for the actions of its agent. your argument FAILS

Oh, Gee!!
06-19-2008, 09:26 AM
This thread should be titled "If You Haven't Been Personally Affected, You Need to Shut Up and Not Question Authority!!"

jochhejaam
06-19-2008, 09:33 AM
under those circumstances, the government agency is responsible for the actions of its agent. your argument FAILS

They are liable, but if it isn't Government Policy to "break and enter" without justification (it isn't), then it isn't Government.

<"Fail" reversal>

Oh, Gee!!
06-19-2008, 09:37 AM
They are liable, but if it isn't Government Policy to "break and enter" without justification (it isn't), then it isn't Government.

when the officer is acting as an officer (searching for contraband, making arrests, etc.) he is acting as an agent for the government. what the officer did may have been unjustified (and apparently it was because the charges were dismissed), but he was acting a government agent while he was doing it.

boutons_
06-19-2008, 09:54 AM
As is typical of a right-winger, the framing of the questions is all wrong and begs the questions, typcial Fox News bullshit.

Power is always abused. See: US Constitution's anti-power paranoia. dubya has greatly increased powers in the name of GWOT. The assumption is that those powers will always be abused. Better to block the powers, not grant the powers, in the first place.

eg: US Immigration can take your laptop at the airport or any border crossing and copy it in totality.

http://news.cnet.com/Police-blotter-Laptop-border-searches-OKd/2100-1030_3-6098939.html

Anyway, if cajun really wants anecdotes of govt malfeasance and abuse (nothing is proved by anecdote(s) in a forum), go check out the few 100K people imprisoned for years for simple possession of small qty marijuana. Going further, check out the sentences of whiteys vs blacks or Hispanics for the same possession crime.

jochhejaam
06-19-2008, 09:56 AM
when the officer is acting as an officer (searching for contraband, making arrests, etc.) he is acting as an agent for the government. what the officer did may have been unjustified (and apparently it was because the charges were dismissed), but he was acting a government agent while he was doing it.

Correct, and acting in violation of Policy, thus the dismissal.


I work for a Housing Authority, obviously our Policy forbids stealing from the Residents for whom we work. If I steal from them (we're bonded and insured) my Employer is liable (subsequent damages paid out could be recaptured from me), but it would be fool-hardy to suggest that it's the Housing Authority that violated the Residents Civil Rights.

101A
06-19-2008, 09:59 AM
My federal government put my name on a no-fly list for more than a year without any justification as to me personally. It cost me plenty of additional exposure to TSA security measures and allowed me to spend literally hours of additional time at airports proving that I have never had any terroristic intentions.


Damn.

We have a winner (or loser as the case may be).

Can you talk about WHY in the hell they might have it out for you. You Arab? Muslim? On the "wrong" mailing list? Sucks.

Oh, Gee!!
06-19-2008, 10:04 AM
Correct, and acting in violation of Policy, thus the dismissal.

I work for a Housing Authority, obviously our Policy forbids stealing from the Residents for whom we work. If I steal from them (we're bonded and insured) my Employer is liable (subsequent damages paid out could be recaptured from me), but it would be fool-hardy to suggest that it's the Housing Authority that violated the Residents Civil Rights.

I think your analogy would be relevant if the police officer had simply stolen from our friend, but did not arrest him and deprive him of his liberty.

xrayzebra
06-19-2008, 10:18 AM
when the officer is acting as an officer (searching for contraband, making arrests, etc.) he is acting as an agent for the government. what the officer did may have been unjustified (and apparently it was because the charges were dismissed), but he was acting a government agent while he was doing it.

Oh, Boy! The only thing govt has done to me is to say I cant smoke in public, must have insurance on my car, wear seat belts, make sure I don't eat any fatty things.

Oh and about the cop that looked in the window and busted what his face. His paraphernalia was in plain view for any person to see by the simple process of looking into his window, which obviously didn't have curtains or drapes pulled. So he was lucky the judge let him off. It was more than likely a legal search. And I suspect he was informed of that or judging from his past post he would now be seeking millions from the local law agency.

Gee I must live a boring life. Naw, I have Spurs Talk, political forum.:lol:lol:lol:lol

boutons_
06-19-2008, 10:21 AM
The innocent, violated victim was exonerated.

Did the govt prosecute the criminal cop? Even just a wink-wink-nudge pro-forma reprimand?

DarkReign
06-19-2008, 10:21 AM
I asked these to Supergirl and she couldnt answer them. She just said she is scared for a hostile takeover.

How has the government interfered in your daily life in the past 8 years? Have you not been able to express yourself in the past 8 years?

I am looking for specific examples. I ask this because a lot of people talk like our government is turning into big brother, but can't give specific examples how. If people really have been affected, I am open to hearing them.

Ask someone who isnt a WASP (or WASL, or WASC).

Especially ask Muslims when they travel.

Ask an emboldened national police force who tazer people for not complying with very trivial instructions under very trivial conditions (traffic stops, for instance...people can have bad days, they dont deserve to be tasered just because Johnny Law decides so. They are public servants employed by those they taser).

Ask any gun afficiando if the government has stepped on their rights.

Ask women who cant have an abortion after being raped without being harassed and otherwise villified if the government has any blame.

Ask those Middle Eastern American citizens who were detained crossing the Canadian border and held without trial immediately after 9/11.

Ask the thousands of Japanese Americans who were "interned" during WW2 for no other reason than having different facial features.

Ask your local militias if they think the government is stepping over their bounds.

Look at your own municipality and the new buildings they pay for, words from their own mouth, on "ticket money". Look at the seatbelt laws, drug laws, moral legislation and other non-criminal offenses that come with big fines and raised rates in an attempt to finance their ever-expanding sphere of control. On our dollar.

Ask manufacturers how a "globalized economy" strategy is working for them.

Ask non-violent drug offenders in prison if the government has stepped on them.

Ask a group of black people in a nice car on a Friday night if the government has ever harassed them.

So on and so on...

Oh, Gee!!
06-19-2008, 10:36 AM
Oh, Boy! The only thing govt has done to me is to say I cant smoke in public, must have insurance on my car, wear seat belts, make sure I don't eat any fatty things.

see? ray knows how the gov't interferes in our daily lives


Oh and about the cop that looked in the window and busted what his face. His paraphernalia was in plain view for any person to see by the simple process of looking into his window, which obviously didn't have curtains or drapes pulled. So he was lucky the judge let him off. It was more than likely a legal search. And I suspect he was informed of that or judging from his past post he would now be seeking millions from the local law agency.

Ray had a Matlock moment


Gee I must live a boring life.

probably

xrayzebra
06-19-2008, 10:40 AM
see? ray knows how the gov't interferes in our daily lives



Ray had a Matlock moment



probably

Thank you for your kind consideration....:toast:lol

cajunspur
06-19-2008, 11:06 AM
Ask someone who isnt a WASP (or WASL, or WASC).

Especially ask Muslims when they travel.

Ask an emboldened national police force who tazer people for not complying with very trivial instructions under very trivial conditions (traffic stops, for instance...people can have bad days, they dont deserve to be tasered just because Johnny Law decides so. They are public servants employed by those they taser).

Ask any gun afficiando if the government has stepped on their rights.

Ask women who cant have an abortion after being raped without being harassed and otherwise villified if the government has any blame.

Ask those Middle Eastern American citizens who were detained crossing the Canadian border and held without trial immediately after 9/11.

Ask the thousands of Japanese Americans who were "interned" during WW2 for no other reason than having different facial features.

Ask your local militias if they think the government is stepping over their bounds.

Look at your own municipality and the new buildings they pay for, words from their own mouth, on "ticket money". Look at the seatbelt laws, drug laws, moral legislation and other non-criminal offenses that come with big fines and raised rates in an attempt to finance their ever-expanding sphere of control. On our dollar.

Ask manufacturers how a "globalized economy" strategy is working for them.

Ask non-violent drug offenders in prison if the government has stepped on them.

Ask a group of black people in a nice car on a Friday night if the government has ever harassed them.

So on and so on...

- Last I checked, abortion was legal.

- Last I checked, WW2 wasnt in the last 8 years

- I am not familiar with any local militias.

- I am asking people on this board that complain about the patriot act and other legislation. So far I have received one good answer.

FromWayDowntown
06-19-2008, 01:21 PM
- Last I checked, abortion was legal.

- Last I checked, WW2 wasnt in the last 8 years

- I am not familiar with any local militias.

- I am asking people on this board that complain about the patriot act and other legislation. So far I have received one good answer.


I suspect that there are things that this Administration has done that a lot of us just don't know about. I've always questioned the constitutionality of much of what the President -- well, mostly the Vice President -- has tried to accomplish, but it wasn't until I recently heard interviews with extremely smart people who were in decision-making and review positions in the legal departments of this Administration that I learned just how true that apparently is. The expansive view of Article II power and the notion that Article II power should trump legislative acts or oversight is both novel and mind-boggling to me. Hearing interviews with Jack Goldsmith -- hardly some liberal lawyer -- and assesssing his view that a significant number of programs undertaken by the Administration are or were illegal and/or unconstitutional is pretty convincing proof to me.

I'll grant that many of the programs affect individuals who aren't Americans, but I'm certain that there are infringements of long-established civil liberties that occur every day, whether the individual targeted by those methods knows of it or not.

I just happen to be one of the people who knows of an unjustified infringement.

xrayzebra
06-19-2008, 03:01 PM
Well all I know is that since 9/11 no one else has blown up anything here in the U.S.of A. And I think that is good. We may have been inconvenienced, and some claim, victimized, but saying it doesn't necessarily mean it happened.

boutons_
06-19-2008, 03:14 PM
"I am not familiar with any local militias"

The FBI has deputized 25K non-FBI people to spy on Americans.

xrayzebra
06-19-2008, 04:58 PM
"I am not familiar with any local militias"

The FBI has deputized 25K non-FBI people to spy on Americans.

Are you one of these deputies? And pray tell how do you know this fact? Got it off the all AQ website.

By the way if you are deputized aren't you part of the problem, I mean organization?:rolleyes

hugespur
06-19-2008, 05:59 PM
When the Nazis came for the communists,
I remained silent;
I was not a communist.

When they locked up the social democrats,
I remained silent;
I was not a social democrat.

When they came for the trade unionists,
I did not speak out;
I was not a trade unionist.

When they came for the Jews,
I remained silent;
I wasn't a Jew.

When they came for me,
there was no one left to speak out

yeah cause thats what is going to happen in America. You are a nut

jochhejaam
06-19-2008, 06:04 PM
I'll grant that many of the programs affect individuals who aren't Americans, but I'm certain that there are infringements of long-established civil liberties that occur every day, whether the individual targeted by those methods knows of it or not.

I just happen to be one of the people who knows of an unjustified infringement.

FWD, are you okay minor infringements on your "Civil Liberties" if these minor infringements are an essential tool in preventing terrorist attacks on American soil, and saving American lives?

Yes or no.

Wild Cobra
06-19-2008, 11:48 PM
I am referring more to things like the Patriot Act that everyone freaks out about.
That touches so few people, I'll bet we have no examples here.

FromWayDowntown
06-20-2008, 01:01 AM
FWD, are you okay minor infringements on your "Civil Liberties" if these minor infringements are an essential tool in preventing terrorist attacks on American soil, and saving American lives?

Yes or no.

Given that there was nothing about the existing civil liberties system on or before 9/10/01 that would have prevented the federal government from uncovering the plot -- indeed, reports suggest that various governmenal agencies had pieces of the puzzle under the then-existing civil liberties regimes and likely would have foiled the plot if they had just shared information willingly -- I'd generally say no because I would dispute that such infringements are essential to those efforts.

I'm not indifferent to the idea of preventing attacks and I can accept that there are certain efforts that government undertakes that are reasonable exceptions to our general notions of civil liberties -- mandatory searches at airports and public buildings would nominally violate warrant requirements but there's a good reason for making an exception in that circumstance. But I think we have to be very careful about any expansive willingness to cede liberties back to government.

To me, giving up liberties in the hope of preventing terrorist attacks is capitulation to terrorists.

jochhejaam
06-20-2008, 05:53 AM
Given that there was nothing about the existing civil liberties system on or before 9/10/01 that would have prevented the federal government from uncovering the plot -- indeed, reports suggest that various governmenal agencies had pieces of the puzzle under the then-existing civil liberties regimes and likely would have foiled the plot if they had just shared information willingly -- I'd generally say no because I would dispute that such infringements are essential to those efforts.

I'm not indifferent to the idea of preventing attacks and I can accept that there are certain efforts that government undertakes that are reasonable exceptions to our general notions of civil liberties -- mandatory searches at airports and public buildings would nominally violate warrant requirements but there's a good reason for making an exception in that circumstance. But I think we have to be very careful about any expansive willingness to cede liberties back to government.

To me, giving up liberties in the hope of preventing terrorist attacks is capitulation to terrorists.


Thanks FWD, your thoughts are appreciated.


In follow-up, would you comment on which specific Civil Liberties being breached, under the guise of protecting us from terrorism, are not an aid in the effort to protect us from terroristic acts, and if you would, provide your basis as to why you don't believe they are helpful.
Thanks.

FromWayDowntown
06-20-2008, 10:06 AM
Thanks FWD, your thoughts are appreciated.


In follow-up, would you comment on which specific Civil Liberties being breached, under the guise of protecting us from terrorism, are not an aid in the effort to protect us from terroristic acts, and if you would, provide your basis as to why you don't believe they are helpful.
Thanks.

Like I said, my understanding is that under the broader understandings and guarantees of civil liberties that existed before the 9/11 attacks, our government was capable of foiling that plot. As such, I would say that no additional infringement upon the civil liberties that were recognized when we all woke up on 9/11/01 would be justifiable to me. That is, I think any diminishment of civil liberties since 9/11 is unnecessary. And, to me, agreeing to reduction in civil liberties -- of any sort -- under the guise of repelling terror attacks is a win for the terrorists. I'm fundamentally against that.

Beyond that I'm not sure I understand what your question is asking.

jochhejaam
06-21-2008, 07:46 AM
Like I said, my understanding is that under the broader understandings and guarantees of civil liberties that existed before the 9/11 attacks, our government was capable of foiling that plot. As such, I would say that no additional infringement upon the civil liberties that were recognized when we all woke up on 9/11/01 would be justifiable to me. That is, I think any diminishment of civil liberties since 9/11 is unnecessary. And, to me, agreeing to reduction in civil liberties -- of any sort -- under the guise of repelling terror attacks is a win for the terrorists. I'm fundamentally against that.

Beyond that I'm not sure I understand what your question is asking.

The question seemed clear to me FWD, but I'll rephrase it:

Question 1: Which specific Civil Liberties being infringed upon (cite them) under the guise of protecting us from terrorism <---your arguement, are not an aid in the battle against terrorism, but are merely an abuse of Government authority?

Question 2: The Government insists that this infringement upon these Civil Liberties (specifically those you cited in response to Question #1) is an essential tool in effectively combating terrorism. What is the reasoning behind your belief that these violations are not essential to further assist the battle against terrorism?



p.s. I understand that you believe that "unecessary" infringement upon our Civil Liberites is capitulating to terrorism, but that's not relevant to the questions, no need to restate it. Thanks.

ElNono
06-21-2008, 08:58 AM
The question seemed clear to me FWD, but I'll rephrase it:

Question 1: Which specific Civil Liberties being infringed upon (cite them) under the guise of protecting us from terrorism <---your arguement, are not an aid in the battle against terrorism, but are merely an abuse of Government authority?

Question 2: The Government insists that this infringement upon these Civil Liberties (specifically those you cited in response to Question #1) is an essential tool in effectively combating terrorism. What is the reasoning behind your belief that these violations are not essential to further assist the battle against terrorism?

p.s. I understand that you believe that "unecessary" infringement upon our Civil Liberites is capitulating to terrorism, but that's not relevant to the questions, no need to restate it. Thanks.

What you don't seem to grasp is that it is relevant to the question. Even if it helps combat terrorism, the diatribe is whether it's worth infringing on other liberties to do so.
I'll give you an example: Say you're an American lawyer, living in the US, and you have a client overseas that's suing the government, that's on one of the government watch lists. You have no way to call and talk to this person over the phone, because you know conversations are tapped. That's basically a violation of the 4th and 6th amendment all at once. LINK (http://writ.news.findlaw.com/amar/20011116.html)

Now you might not give a shit about civil liberties, but I'll take the word from somebody orders of magnitude more savvy when it comes to society:

"Any society that would give up a little liberty to gain a little security will deserve neither and lose both. "
Benjamin Franklin

jochhejaam
06-21-2008, 10:00 AM
What you don't seem to grasp is that it is relevant to the question. Even if it helps combat terrorism, the diatribe is whether it's worth infringing on other liberties to do so.
No, FWD's premise that "infringing on Civil Liberties = capitulating to terrorists" is not relevant to the information I"m seeking. I'll be the final arbiter of that.





I'll give you an example: Say you're an American lawyer, living in the US, and you have a client overseas that's suing the government, that's on one of the government watch lists. You have no way to call and talk to this person over the phone, because you know conversations are tapped. That's basically a violation of the 4th and 6th amendment all at once.
That's all well and good, but I'm not argueing that there are not Civil Liberties being violated.


The Government, in an effort to combat terrorism and save my life violated the Civil Rights of someone on their watch list. Result? We have a few isolated instances where someone's due process was violated, but, this broad oversight into people of interest also results in;
-frustrating the efforts of terrorists, i.e, spared the lives of innocents.
-capturing terrorists, thereby sparing the lives of innocents.
- interfered and intercepted with terrorist communication, ultimately saving the lives of innocents.

Personalize it:
They interfered with your Brother who is on their watch list, but they saved your Sisters and your Fathers life.
Is it worth it?






Now you might not give a shit about civil liberties, but I'll take the word from somebody orders of magnitude more savvy when it comes to society:
Lets straighten that out, I care.





"Any society that would give up a little liberty to gain a little security will deserve neither and lose both. "
Benjamin Franklin

That's good, I like Ben, but that doesn't address giving up a little liberty to gain a lot of security, say preventing a dirty bomb, another 9/11, etc.

jochhejaam
06-21-2008, 10:05 AM
edit

FromWayDowntown
06-21-2008, 12:25 PM
The question seemed clear to me FWD, but I'll rephrase it:

Question 1: Which specific Civil Liberties being infringed upon (cite them) under the guise of protecting us from terrorism <---your arguement, are not an aid in the battle against terrorism, but are merely an abuse of Government authority?

Question 2: The Government insists that this infringement upon these Civil Liberties (specifically those you cited in response to Question #1) is an essential tool in effectively combating terrorism. What is the reasoning behind your belief that these violations are not essential to further assist the battle against terrorism?



p.s. I understand that you believe that "unecessary" infringement upon our Civil Liberites is capitulating to terrorism, but that's not relevant to the questions, no need to restate it. Thanks.

But it is relevant to the questions. I don't buy your premise, so my answer to your question #1 is that there is no infringement on civil liberties that is necessary in aid of fighting terrorism. Your premise that there are some civil liberties that can be infringed in the name of deterring terrorists attacks is fundamentally anathema to my view of civil liberties. And I also vehemently believe, given that fighting terrorism effectively was wholly possible before 9/11, I can't think of a single infringed upon liberty (broader exceptions to the warrant requirement -- things like wiretapping and information mining, to cite a specific example) that could be justified by saying it helps to fight terror, to respond to your question #2.

If your effort is to extract some sort of admission that government should, in some cases, infringe civil liberties (beyond things that ensure safety on a broader scale -- like increased security at airports) to fight terror, I can assure you that you'll never get that concession from me. To the extent that I believe anything that the current President says, one thing I do agree with him about is the notion that terrorists depise American freedoms. As a necessary corrolary of that position, I think that if we voluntarily give up some of those freedoms in the guise of preventing terror attacks, we've capitulated to terrorists.

FromWayDowntown
06-21-2008, 12:32 PM
The Government, in an effort to combat terrorism and save my life violated the Civil Rights of someone on their watch list. Result? We have a few isolated instances where someone's due process was violated, but, this broad oversight into people of interest also results in;
-frustrating the efforts of terrorists, i.e, spared the lives of innocents.
-capturing terrorists, thereby sparing the lives of innocents.
- interfered and intercepted with terrorist communication, ultimately saving the lives of innocents.

Personalize it:
They interfered with your Brother who is on their watch list, but they saved your Sisters and your Fathers life.
Is it worth it?

The answer to that, to me, is simple -- absolutely not. Again, I've said from the get-go that I believe (from numerous reports providing similar information) that the 9/11 attacks could have been foiled under the civil liberties regime that was in place before those attacks. Given that possibility, I don't see the justification for eroding civil liberties in any manner (however slight) to accomplish things that could have been accomplished anyway.

I'd much rather run the risk of being killed by a terrorist knowing that I live with substantial freedom than reduce that risk by ceding any portion of my liberties.

It's really odd to me, too, that the conservative/libertarian faction that chastizes candidates like Obama for wanting governmental involvment in various aspects of American life is so willing to accept governmental involvment in aspects of American life that more directly impact the fundamental liberties that Americans have ensured for themselves.

jochhejaam
06-21-2008, 02:56 PM
, I can't think of a single infringed upon liberty (broader exceptions to the warrant requirement -- things like wiretapping and information mining, to cite a specific example) that could be justified by saying it helps to fight terror...
Terrorists' mastermind attacks via communications that can be intercepted through wiretapping and information mining, and that's not an aid to fighting terror?
Are you kidding me?

Also, you spoke of the fact that there were pre-9/11 terrorist fighting techniques in place that offered us the effectiveness equal to that of wiretapping and information mining. What were these?

jochhejaam
06-21-2008, 03:02 PM
If your effort is to extract some sort of admission that government should, in some cases, infringe civil liberties (beyond things that ensure safety on a broader scale -- like increased security at airports) to fight terror, I can assure you that you'll never get that concession from me.

Rest assured that I'm not trying to extract any concessions from you; I'm merely attempting to get you to give specific and direct answers to direct questions.

FromWayDowntown
06-21-2008, 03:14 PM
Terrorists' mastermind attacks via communications that can be intercepted through wiretapping and information mining, and that's not an aid to fighting terror?
Are you kidding me?

Also, you spoke of the fact that there were pre-9/11 terrorist fighting techniques in place that offered us the effectiveness equal to that of wiretapping and information mining. What were these?

Without those things, we knew enough to break up the 9/11 plot. The problem in foiling the attack wasn't the lack of resources to provide information -- it was the lack of internal communication about what various agencies knew. The government didn't need warrantless wiretaps and omnibus information mining to get that knowledge.

You're either willfully avoiding my point or you simply don't understand my position.

As to your point, if the end you seek is foiling terror plots, then why not support random raids on people's homes or temporary detention and interrogation of those who might seem suspicious? Those tactics would almost necessrily ensure that there would be no more terror attacks that have their launch points in the United States.

FromWayDowntown
06-21-2008, 03:15 PM
Rest assured that I'm not trying to extract any concessions from you; I'm merely attempting to get you to give specific and direct answers to direct questions.

I've given you specific and direct answers -- I don't think that the infringements upon our liberty (no matter how effective they might be in fighting terrorism) are justifiable. Can I make that point any more simply for you? For me to engage you beyond that fundamental disagreement with your premise would be for me to either engage entirely in hypotheticals or for me to admit that I agree there is some merit to your position. Given that I fundamentally disagree with any additional erosion of civil liberties in the name of fighting terrorism -- the point I've made all along -- I'm not sure what point is served by pretending that I might somehow agree with your premise.

boutons_
06-21-2008, 04:13 PM
"it was the lack of internal communication about what various agencies knew"

... which was fixable if the agencies' boss, aka the WH, would have put all the federal/state/local law enforcement agencies on high alert (as the 9/11 Comission said), and perhaps opened new ports to an information clearing house, that would have permitted "this Arab student pilot wants to learn to fly and turn jets, but not how to take-off 7 land" reaching the top rather than being snuffed by the FBI bureaucracy.

Since the WH hates government and always intends/expects/encourages it to fail, esp when the WH was looking for pretext for the Iraq war, the WH did nothing, absolutely nothing pre-9/11 about terrorism. The WH let 9/11 happen.

As bad as the security/law enforcement agencies are about not cooperating and turf wars (we can assume they are no better now, and worse with DHS in the mix), good EXECutive initiatives and leadership

For expansion of Exec branch spying on anybody without a Judicial branch warrant, this totally nullifies the 4th amendment, removes checks & balances.

Did the states ratify that nullification and change to the Constitution?

The assumption in the paranoid Constitution is that all power will sooner or later be abused, that all men are corruptible by power and money, will consider themselves above the law. Therefore, the magnificent system of check and balances.

yeah, yeaH, I know, I'm for checks and balances, therefore I'm a liberal, tree-hugging, treasonous, terrorist accomplice and I "must have something to hide" from the govt.

jochhejaam
06-21-2008, 04:13 PM
I've given you specific and direct answers -- I don't think that the infringements upon our liberty (no matter how effective they might be in fighting terrorism) are justifiable. Can I make that point any more simply for you?

Simply put, it's quite clear that as far as you’re concerned, the lives of innocent Americans that are protected from terrorist elements by state-of-the-art terrorism fighting techniques, via minor infringements on our Civil Liberties, mean less to you than the preservation of those liberties, even though the intrusion into those liberties are totally imperceptive to the overwhelmingly vast majority of Americans.

Got it, thanks!

FromWayDowntown
06-21-2008, 05:18 PM
Simply put, it's quite clear that as far as you’re concerned, the lives of innocent Americans that are protected from terrorist elements by state-of-the-art terrorism fighting techniques, via minor infringements on our Civil Liberties, mean less to you than the preservation of those liberties, even though the intrusion into those liberties are totally imperceptive to the overwhelmingly vast majority of Americans.

Got it, thanks!

Yep -- you got it. Liberty is what being an American is about. Consider me unconvinced that even minor infringements of civil liberties are "necessary" to protect innocent Americans.

Fight crime smartly and let people live their lives with the freedoms our Constitution ensures.

jochhejaam
06-21-2008, 06:49 PM
Obama Supports FISA Legislation, Angering Left
Excerpt;
"Given the legitimate threats we face, providing effective intelligence collection tools with appropriate safeguards is too important to delay...
-Barack Obama-

http://blog.washingtonpost.com/the-trail/2008/06/20/obama_supports_fisa_legislatio.html


Nice to see that even though Obama is Harvard educated, and a Civil Rights activist, he can still appreciate the value of FISA and wiretap statutes as being meaningful and substantial tools for fighting terrorism.

:clap




"Timing is everything"

PixelPusher
06-21-2008, 06:57 PM
Nice to see that even though Obama is Harvard educated, and a Civil Rights activist, he can still appreciate the value of FISA and wiretap statutes as being meaningful and substantial tools for fighting terrorism.


As opposed to the Bush Administration and paranoids on the right, who thought FISA should have been scrapped completely, and the only "statute" for wiretapping should be absolute, unchallenged executive authority.

jochhejaam
06-21-2008, 07:32 PM
As opposed to the Bush Administration and paranoids on the right, who thought FISA should have been scrapped completely, and the only "statute" for wiretapping should be absolute, unchallenged executive authority.

Sure, whatever Pix, and I appreciate you taking the time to respond to my post!

PixelPusher
06-21-2008, 07:48 PM
Sure, whatever Pix, and I appreciate you taking the time to respond to my post!

"sure, whatever" seems to be the extent to which you've considered this issue.

boutons_
06-21-2008, 08:55 PM
"Liberty is what being an American is about"

no, it's not. What excites foreingers about USA is the Rule of Law, a synthetic nation of laws. That's why dubya violating and gutting so many laws, and putting his Exec above the law in total secrecy, has pissed off so many people and brought down the USA in eyes of the world.

Wild Cobra
06-21-2008, 11:42 PM
What you don't seem to grasp is that it is relevant to the question. Even if it helps combat terrorism, the diatribe is whether it's worth infringing on other liberties to do so.

There are several things that have always been legal that can by accident restrict a persons liberties. The Patriot Act isn't meant to do so.



I'll give you an example: Say you're an American lawyer, living in the US, and you have a client overseas that's suing the government, that's on one of the government watch lists. You have no way to call and talk to this person over the phone, because you know conversations are tapped. That's basically a violation of the 4th and 6th amendment all at once.

Not true. The government does not tap every overseas call. The client would first have to be on the suspect list. Read the fourth carefully. "Against unreasonable" is in there.



Now you might not give a shit about civil liberties, but I'll take the word from somebody orders of magnitude more savvy when it comes to society:

"Any society that would give up a little liberty to gain a little security will deserve neither and lose both. "
Benjamin Franklin

We are not giving up liberty. I care far more for them than most here in this forum, and I see no problems here. Yes, there is the occasional mishap. Do we put a stop to all law enforcement efforts for the 0.001% times mistakes are made? It appears you want to take this to the extreme of Anarchy, with no authority of law.

What liberties have you lost? What liberties might you lose?

ElNono
06-22-2008, 09:52 AM
No, FWD's premise that "infringing on Civil Liberties = capitulating to terrorists" is not relevant to the information I"m seeking. I'll be the final arbiter of that.
Every single one of us will be the final arbiter of that. Your 'neutrality' on the subject is no different than anybody else.



That's all well and good, but I'm not argueing that there are not Civil Liberties being violated.

The Government, in an effort to combat terrorism and save my life violated the Civil Rights of someone on their watch list. Result? We have a few isolated instances where someone's due process was violated, but, this broad oversight into people of interest also results in;
-frustrating the efforts of terrorists, i.e, spared the lives of innocents.
-capturing terrorists, thereby sparing the lives of innocents.
- interfered and intercepted with terrorist communication, ultimately saving the lives of innocents.

That's what you believe. There's no proof that the violation of liberties has actually prevented ANYTHING. As a matter of fact, the entire system is so secretive, complete lacking any kind of check and balances, that you will probably never know. What's worse, we actually know for a fact that things like the National Security Letters, implemented under the Patriot act, were and still are being abused. I mean, tapping calls didn't prevent the Madrid or London bombings, did it? Do you have ANY proof your security increased by tapping of communications?



Personalize it:
They interfered with your Brother who is on their watch list, but they saved your Sisters and your Fathers life.
Is it worth it?

Well, I personalized it the day I decided to live in this country. Nobody else other than my wife lives in this country, and the day I decided this is the place I'm going to live in, is the day I also decided that living free and enjoying the liberties this country provide come at a price. Unlike you, I have lived in an oppressive country. And I'm fully willing to risk my life to enjoy the liberty and freedoms of this country. You know what's your problem? You live in fear, you live terrorized that those terrorists will strike and kill you or somebody around you. This is exactly what the bad guys want. I refuse to live like that. I will not submit to them, and I will defend what makes this country great.



Lets straighten that out, I care.

No you do not. You say you care, but you are so terrorized that we just have to spook you with the words security and terrorism, and you'll give up the keys to your house.



That's good, I like Ben, but that doesn't address giving up a little liberty to gain a lot of security, say preventing a dirty bomb, another 9/11, etc.
Intelligence was not what failed in 9/11, it was the government inability to act on that intelligence. There was no reason to start the citizen profiling that has been going on in this country since then. Everyone is a threat until proven otherwise? Bunch of nonsense. And you sense of security is completely misplaced. Have you ever been to the Valley down south? Do you realize how many people/cars/drugs are smuggled every day? Do you know how easy it would be for bad guys and their gear to sneak through there?

ElNono
06-22-2008, 10:56 AM
There are several things that have always been legal that can by accident restrict a persons liberties. The Patriot Act isn't meant to do so.
But it did, that's why at least 3 provisions were struck down by courts as unconstitutional, and thus illegal (NSL, the 'sneak and peek' searches and material support).



Not true. The government does not tap every overseas call. The client would first have to be on the suspect list. Read the fourth carefully. "Against unreasonable" is in there.
Is the list available to see if my client is there? Who is to decide who is in that list? If my client is there in error, how to I correct the error? Can I challenge whether 'unreasonable' in the fourth applies to my calls?
There are no checks and balances. There's no way to know whether the system is abused.



We are not giving up liberty. I care far more for them than most here in this forum, and I see no problems here. Yes, there is the occasional mishap. Do we put a stop to all law enforcement efforts for the 0.001% times mistakes are made? It appears you want to take this to the extreme of Anarchy, with no authority of law.
I don't think anybody here is asking for law enforcement to cease. I think we're only asking law enforcement to be lawful. And if we believe it's not, to be able to challenge it on a court of law.



What liberties have you lost? What liberties might you lose?
Until struck down as unconstitutional, I lost the right to privacy on my own home.I might still lose the liberty to travel freely, if somebody ever arbitrarily decided I should be on the no-fly list. A list I can't have access to, and that I have no possibility to challenge before becoming a part of. Most important, being that I'm not a citizen yet, I'm still on the hook for indefinite detention without a trial.

jochhejaam
06-23-2008, 06:58 AM
Every single one of us will be the final arbiter of that. Your 'neutrality' on the subject is no different than anybody else.
:lol El, it's not about neutrality, it's about me being the one that's privy to what specific information I'm seeking from another poster. (why do I feel that you still won't get it?)





That's what you believe. There's no proof that the violation of liberties has actually prevented ANYTHING. As a matter of fact, the entire system is so secretive, complete lacking any kind of check and balances, that you will probably never know. What's worse, we actually know for a fact that things like the National Security Letters, implemented under the Patriot act, were and still are being abused. I mean, tapping calls didn't prevent the Madrid or London bombings, did it? Do you have ANY proof your security increased by tapping of communications?
Major Fail.
Do we have any proof that increased security at major sporting events has done prevented tragedy? (I'll answer it for you, NO!) And it would be idiotic to go back to minimal security because we can't prove that the extra security was a deterrent. Common sense should tell us that high-tech security, and added security is an aid in protecting our Country from terrorist elements.
FISA has unequivocally prevented terrorist attacks (skeptical? prove that it hasn't).

No terrorist attacks on American soil since 9/11 would support my stand, and undermine yours.







You live in fear, you live terrorized that those terrorists will strike and kill you or somebody around you. This is exactly what the bad guys want. I refuse to live like that.
Pompous of you to characterize someone you no almost nothing about. Fear of what, death?
Allow me to educate you in an effort to allow you to make observations that aren't steeped in ignorance.
I'm secure in the eternal ramifications of leaving this life, absolutely no fear.





I will not submit to them, and I will defend what makes this country great.
A welcome to you and your wife to America, but again you are in dire need of an education, America is not a great Country because of a history of ignoring the threats of foreign dangers (I'll assume that your somewhat educated of how the citizens of our great Country have shed their blood through fighting for the freedom we now have), that would deprive of us liberty and freedom.

Tell me El, how do you play do defend this Country from terrorist threats, by protesting in front of Government buildings with a little sign that says "No To Wiretapping?".







No you do not. You say you care, but you are so terrorized that we just have to spook you with the words security and terrorism, and you'll give up the keys to your house.
Too ignorant to merit a response



Work beckons, later El.

spurster
06-23-2008, 07:38 AM
All these arguments for increased security for terrorism have always applied for substantial criminal activity that the US has always had (judging by our huge prison population). Terrorism and other hot button issues (child porn, drugs, illegal immigration) are wet dreams for those in law enforcement who have always wanted total access to what all of us are doing. Of course, none of us of want those things, so to protect us, we need all of our communications wiretapped and our travel tracked and cameras watching us everywhere, or so the logic goes.

FromWayDowntown
06-23-2008, 07:46 AM
Major Fail.
Do we have any proof that increased security at major sporting events has done prevented tragedy? (I'll answer it for you, NO!) And it would be idiotic to go back to minimal security because we can't prove that the extra security was a deterrent. Common sense should tell us that high-tech security, and added security is an aid in protecting our Country from terrorist elements.
FISA has unequivocally prevented terrorist attacks (skeptical? prove that it hasn't).

No terrorist attacks on American soil since 9/11 would support my stand, and undermine yours.

What a load of nonsense. The fact that there have been no terrorist attacks on American soil since 9/11 is consistent with the fact that there had, in large part, been no terrorist attacks on American soil before 9/11, too. Regardless of that, the fact that there have been no terrorist attacks on American soil since 9/11 doesn't prove that FISA -- which the Administration has argued it need not follow (and, to follow jochhejaam logic, likely hasn't followed) -- is effective; it proves that there have been no terrorist attacks on American soil.

And how ridiculous to say that FISA has worked unequivocally and then place the burden of negation on someone else. If you think FISA has "unequivocally prevented terrorist attacks," I'd say the argumentative burden is on you to establish that fact.

ElNono
06-23-2008, 08:39 AM
:lol El, it's not about neutrality, it's about me being the one that's privy to what specific information I'm seeking from another poster. (why do I feel that you still won't get it?)

No, what is it is your complete dishonesty in seeking for an answer that suits you needs to either vilify him as a person who doesn't care (which you did, completely expected) or should have he chosen to fall for your deceit, engage in conversation under your terms. This is a public forum. Your terms mean shit.



Major Fail.
Do we have any proof that increased security at major sporting events has done prevented tragedy? (I'll answer it for you, NO!) And it would be idiotic to go back to minimal security because we can't prove that the extra security was a deterrent. Common sense should tell us that high-tech security, and added security is an aid in protecting our Country from terrorist elements.
FISA has unequivocally prevented terrorist attacks (skeptical? prove that it hasn't).
No terrorist attacks on American soil since 9/11 would support my stand, and undermine yours.

What does sporting events have to do with anything? I have no problem with increased security just as long as it is legal, and does not infringe on anybody's rights and liberties. And I can see you're completely ignorant in what you're trying to argue about. FISA was passed after the massive wiretaps on civilians directed by Nixon in order to put a stop to citizen profiling. FISA is legal, contains provisions for the checks and balances I mentioned in earlier posts and already provides immunity to telecoms. What we're talking about here are the secret NSA wiretaps, which we discussed at length with Wild Cobra (and we couldn't agree) on this very same board. The sole reason they need to re-issue immunity for telcos is because this government went around FISA in order to wiretap at will without a court order.



Pompous of you to characterize someone you no almost nothing about. Fear of what, death?
Allow me to educate you in an effort to allow you to make observations that aren't steeped in ignorance.
I'm secure in the eternal ramifications of leaving this life, absolutely no fear.

A welcome to you and your wife to America, but again you are in dire need of an education, America is not a great Country because of a history of ignoring the threats of foreign dangers (I'll assume that your somewhat educated of how the citizens of our great Country have shed their blood through fighting for the freedom we now have), that would deprive of us liberty and freedom.


Sorry to burst your bubble, but I'm very well versed in the history of this Nation, and proudly so. And my wife is American, born in the great state of Texas. And what really intrigues me is the contradiction in what you posted above. So American soldiers have made the ultimate sacrifice for liberty and freedom, yet you are so easily foiled into giving up what they fought so hard for. You're not even putting up a fight. Truly a disgrace.



Tell me El, how do you play do defend this Country from terrorist threats, by protesting in front of Government buildings with a little sign that says "No To Wiretapping?".

Terrorists are not the only threat out there. This is a country that prides itself on freedom and justice. Whenever somebody comes around and chips away part of your freedom and passes a bunch of unconstitutional laws, no matter the excuse, you also need to be vigilant. Democracy is a system of checks and balances, and when those are not present, abuse creeps in. Those people are putting up a fight for the liberty you are ever so willing to give up.

And BTW, I noticed you completely avoided the question:
Considering the amount of people/trucks/drugs coming through from the south, what is to prevent a bad guy and their gear coming through that area? Is that how we protect against terrorists? You're telling me that a guy with a sign protesting government worries you more than protecting our borders?

ElNono
06-23-2008, 08:54 AM
What a load of nonsense. The fact that there have been no terrorist attacks on American soil since 9/11 is consistent with the fact that there had, in large part, been no terrorist attacks on American soil before 9/11, too. Regardless of that, the fact that there have been no terrorist attacks on American soil since 9/11 doesn't prove that FISA -- which the Administration has argued it need not follow (and, to follow jochhejaam logic, likely hasn't followed) -- is effective; it proves that there have been no terrorist attacks on American soil.

And how ridiculous to say that FISA has worked unequivocally and then place the burden of negation on someone else. If you think FISA has "unequivocally prevented terrorist attacks," I'd say the argumentative burden is on you to establish that fact.

He's completely ignorant on FISA. FISA existed before 9/11, and provides for a secret court to issue subpoenas to authorize wiretapping. Even more, FISA contemplated starting wiretaps before obtaining the court authorization, provided that the law enforcement agency applied for the order within a week of the tap's start. Even more interesting is that FISA was enacted after the Watergate scandal, a notorious political abuse case, because Nixon wiretapped the media and citizens in general. It was a system designed to provide checks and balances, judicial overview, and a fair immunity system for telcos. The fact that this government completely avoided FISA goes to show the complete disregard for law and accountability. What's even more sad is people buying into the necessity of breaking the law under the guise of terrorism.

jochhejaam
06-23-2008, 08:10 PM
What a load of nonsense. The fact that there have been no terrorist attacks on American soil since 9/11 is consistent with the fact that there had, in large part, been no terrorist attacks on American soil before 9/11, too. Regardless of that, the fact that there have been no terrorist attacks on American soil since 9/11 doesn't prove that FISA -- which the Administration has argued it need not follow (and, to follow jochhejaam logic, likely hasn't followed) -- is effective; it proves that there have been no terrorist attacks on American soil.

What a pant load. That’s like saying that even though the levees that failed before Katrina were breached, they should be built to the same structural integrity before Katrina, because they were sufficient before. You’re leaving out a big part of the picture, KATRINA HAPPENED! Thank God that the USACE used common sense and didn’t follow FWD’s flawed logic when restoring the levees, they realized, as logic would dictate, that maintaining the status quo, i.e., the levy strength they had in place before Katrina, obviously wasn’t adequate.

Likewise the pre 9/11 consistency you speak of was shattered by 9/11, and it mattered not that it was adequate before because; 9/11 HAPPENED!
In light of the devastating and crippling affects of the terrorist strike on 9/11, maintaining the status quo within our National Security Agencies was unthinkable. Changes were in order, changes were demanded, and changes came!

FromWayDowntown
06-23-2008, 08:30 PM
What a pant load. That’s like saying that even though the levees that failed before Katrina were breached, they should be built to the same structural integrity before Katrina, because they were sufficient before. You’re leaving out a big part of the picture, KATRINA HAPPENED! Thank God that the USACE used common sense and didn’t follow FWD’s flawed logic when restoring the levees, they realized, as logic would dictate, that maintaining the status quo, i.e., the levy strength they had in place before Katrina, obviously wasn’t adequate.

That's a ridiculous analogy, Joch. I realize that we're talking at cross-purposes here and neither will convince the other of the perceived error of his ways. But there's a clear distinction between my point and your contrived Katrina analogy.

Nothing that Katrina did was avoidable, except by the construction of better levees. As such, the justifiable course of action to avoid the consequences of other storms like Katrina is enhancing the protections against those sorts of storms.

My point is that the protections that existed were sufficient to stop 9/11 -- what interfered with that wasn't some structural problem that could have never stopped the ensuing destruction; what interfered with stopping the attack was bureaucratic nonsense that could have clearly been avoided. As such, the justifiable course of action to avoid the possibility of other attacks like 9/11 was to reorganize the bureaucracy. There was no justification for eroding civil liberties in the name of stopping another terror attack -- that's rebuilding the levees but using better engineering and ideas; it's not taking people's property to build stronger levees than ever conceived.


Likewise the pre 9/11 consistency you speak of was shattered by 9/11, and it mattered not that it was adequate before because; 9/11 HAPPENED! In light of the devastating and crippling affects of the terrorist strike on 9/11, maintaining the status quo within our National Security Agencies was unthinkable. Changes were in order, changes were demanded, and changes came!

So if there's another attack, further erosion of civil liberties will be the order of the day? Where does it end? Are you comfortable with the notion of a police state if that's what it takes to prevent terror attacks? Taken to its logical conclusion, that's precisely the point of your argument -- government should do whatever it must to stop terror attacks, even at the cost of individual liberties, right?

9/11 is not proof that changes were in order in terms of the civil liberties of Americans; it's proof to me that changes were in order in terms of how intelligence-gathering entities in local, state, and federal governments interacted with one another. You're right that maintaining the status quo was unthinkable, but you've not done one thing to persuade me that the People were the constituency that should have had those changes foisted upon them -- fix the bureaucracy first.

jochhejaam
06-23-2008, 09:20 PM
That's a ridiculous analogy, Joch. I realize that we're talking at cross-purposes here and neither will convince the other of the perceived error of his ways.
"And never the twain shall meet". I'm good with that FWD. My participation in the thread is three fold; in general, for educational purposes, and to define my own position on the issue through the exchange of opinions (that's 2 of the 3 for those that are counting), and specifically, in the discussion with you, to find out where your bottom line was on the issue. Mission accomplished so to speak.

(I don't agree that the analogy was ridiculous)