EFF Says Obama Warrantless Wiretap Defense Is Worse than Bush 904
SonicSpike writes "The Electronic Frontier Foundation has just said that 'In the warrantless wiretapping case, Obama DOJ's new arguments are worse than Bush's.'"
When speculation has done its worst, two plus two still equals four. -- S. Johnson
FTFA (Score:4, Interesting)
The DOJ claims that the U.S. Government is completely immune from litigation for illegal spying -- that the Government can never be sued for surveillance that violates federal privacy statutes...No one -- not the White House, not the Justice Department, not any member of Congress, and not the Bush Administration -- has ever interpreted the law this way.
Wow, nothing like taking things to the next level, huh? I guess Obama brought his A-game.
Re:Change (Score:5, Interesting)
Well, at least Guantanamo is being shut down, so we in the rest of the world can relax a little, while things stay the same for the actual US citizens..
Sly like a fox (Score:2, Interesting)
One can only hope he's making bad arguments in a secret plot to get shot down by the courts while being able to look like he's "standing up against terrorism."
One can hope.
Sigh.
Re:RTFS?? (Score:2, Interesting)
We are apparently continuing fast down the Bush road to a completely independent, unaccountable, all-powerful presidency.
Wow. Even now, people like you still think "it's Bush's fault".
Grow up.
This is probably smarter (Score:5, Interesting)
The Obama administration has roughly the same goals as the Bush administration, so it's no surprise that they're continuing to pursue them.
The change, and it is a change, is that they are pursuing them in a smarter way.
1) By making this extreme argument, they give judges wiggle-room to reject it and then accept the state secrets argument, while still allowing the judge to make token gestures in favor of the rule of law, even write a long, pious opinion dismissing the second argument while accepting the first. I can see that it would be very easy for any judge to delude himself into believing he was making a Solomonic compromise. Very smart on their part.
2) If the second argument *does* somehow fly, they have carte blanche to do what they want. I suspect that the Bush administration would've argued for the same thing, except that they weren't smart enough to come up with a line of argument that would've passed the laugh test (IANAL, maybe this one doesn't either.)
Begin broken record mode: The only way to get real improvement from Obama (or from Bush, for that matter,) is to mobilize the public to control the government. No elected leader is going to do this for us as a gift, we have to maintain the pressure constantly.
Personally, I'm much more disappointed with his ongoing embrace of "public-private partnerships" in education (crooked self-dealing and cronyism do not focus group so well, so they rebranded them as "public-private partnerships" in which the government partners with a private entity to give it money with minimal oversight and much righteous rhetoric.) My saintly mother blogs about it: http://chemtchr.dailykos.com/ [dailykos.com]
And I'm sure Obama has not delivered from progressives on a dozen other fronts. Only way he will is *if we make him*. In the case of progressive causes that are popular with the public, this should be relatively easy, and ought to benefit the election prospects of the Democratic party anyway, so let's get going.
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:This isn't a 180 (Score:5, Interesting)
Obama voted yes for the telecom immunity bill. He supported the wiretapping program in the Senate, why do you think he'd stop supporting it when he was elected President?
Substance doesn't matter to "Hope And Change" zombies.
Not that it matters much to the "Saddam planned 9/11" crowd, but liberals are supposed to be Sooooo Muuuuch Smarter, Hipper And Rational than Bible-thumping Young Earth Creationist conservatives that you'd think they'd care a smidgen about reality.
Re:And Krugman says his bank bail out... (Score:2, Interesting)
Actually, I am talking about the lib philosophy "do whatever feels good at the moment and screw any consequences later". Or, the politician's philosophy of "do whatever works to better my position and screw the rest of the country".
We need to take Shakespeare's idea one step further "The first thing we do, let's kill all the lawyers and politicians"!
Re:RTFA - I did and it's depressing (Score:4, Interesting)
Folks, this is what many of us voted for and this is the conclusion of the EFF;
Again, the gulf between Candidate Obama and President Obama is striking. As a candidate, Obama ran promising a new era of government transparency and accountability, an end to the Bush DOJ's radical theories of executive power, and reform of the PATRIOT Act. But, this week, Obama's own Department Of Justice has argued that, under the PATRIOT Act, the government shall be entirely unaccountable for surveilling Americans in violation of its own laws.
This isn't change we can believe in. This is change for the worse.
Tyranny we can believe in.
Re:RTFS?? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:This isn't a 180 (Score:3, Interesting)
Voted for Obama because despite his moronic position on this he's a vasty better person to have as president than Bush, Et al. Or McCain/Palin
Bush was certainly, um, "less than perfect", but I see nowhere that B.O. is vastly better than W.
Unless you consider "better" to mean
In which case, yes, B.O. is much better than Bush!
This is what the republicans didn't understand... (Score:3, Interesting)
that maybe somebody else would come in and use the powers already established. Everybody has said it since the beginning of elected governance - don't give yourself powers that you don't want 'the other guy to have', because he will.
I happened to support Obama, and still tenuously do, but I am greatly saddened by this, the RIAA appointments, and many other things. But even Obama is only extending, minimally, what the Bush administration gave him.
Even though I am very unhappy with this, it'll still be funny to see Fox News hop on this with their usual cognitive dissonance, forgetting that Bush started this mess.
Re:This needs to get press. (Score:3, Interesting)
Bush was pretty much relentlessly attacked by the media, Hollywood elites and blogosphere for all eight years.
Ahhh while Rush Limbaugh is going easy on Obama along with FoxNews, must have missed that.
World summary on Bush: An dumb asshole, right from the moment he threatened China (pre-9-11) and said that knowing the leader of Pakistan wouldn't be important (during his campaign).
And to the question of "if he was stupid how did he do so many things" the answer is the most aggressively active vice-president in the history of the US Mr Dick Cheney a man who claimed to part of both the executive and legislative while also being accountable to the rules of neither.
Please don't limit the abuse of Bush to a limited set of people, there are around 6.5 billion people in the world and 6.4 billion thought he was an asshole.
Re:Obamunism in action (Score:5, Interesting)
This has nothing to do with Obama (other than that his DOJ is making the argument), and it is not a bullshit argument from a legal standpoint.
It's called sovereign immunity [wikipedia.org], and we brought it over to our legal system from the British system when we declared independence. To put it shortly, it's exactly what you quoted: Congress has to waive its immunity in order for you to sue the federal government. There are a few laws on the books outlining cases in which they automatically waive that right. I don't know if this would be one of them, except to say that the DOJ obviously feels there's at least an argument to be made that it isn't.
I agree with what somebody else said in another thread earlier: Sovereign immunity has no place in a democratic society. That said, though, it's here and as frightening as it may be, it's far from a bullshit legal argument to have a lawsuit dismissed. It's a good one.
Re:FTFA (Score:3, Interesting)
FTW
Its very hypocritical for the Obama administration to try to use to stand behind the law that they criticized so much, but i guess parties are expected to use whatever law they can to defend themselves.
Honestly, the Obama administration should be ashamed of defending such a case at all, since the case really isn't against them, only the powers their official positions presumably (presumed by the Bush Administration) carry. And so by continuing they make a mockery of themselves: Their only reason to defend this case is if the Obama Administration has something invested in these false powers, and wishes to continue burying American constitutional rights. (or that they they are so much self-endowed into the infallibility of fellow government agencies that they cannot let the NSA and others defend their actions without the Executive, that they feel some moral obligation to protect the justice and process of other agencies.)
Re:RTFS?? (Score:2, Interesting)
The "Bush" road was built by Nixon. Bush's crew just made it into a six lane superhighway. And Now, Obama gets to try it out...in his brand new Ferrari (get with the times, will ya? It's a Tesla)
Re:This needs to get press. (Score:3, Interesting)
I wouldn't call it a landslide. 54% for Obama, 46% for McCain (rounded results), for the popular vote. A small fraction for everyone else.
What bothers me is the discrepancy between the popular vote and the electoral vote. The electoral votes: 68% for Obama, 32% for McCain.
This isn't the first election in which the electoral votes have bothered me. I understand why it was done in the early years of the country: They didn't have the communication abilities that we have today, so it wasn't reasonable to have every vote counted. Delegates were sent instead, representing a portion of the population.
These days, I think it is perfectly reasonable for the electoral college to be removed completely.
What did anyone expect? (Score:4, Interesting)
What does anyone expect from a bloated government bureaucracy that seems to exist for no other reason to protect it's own power.
Conservatives and liberals are both happily sacrificing liberty for security, the only difference being their motivations for doing so. Conservatives generally have a fear of ambiguous foreign threats. Liberals want to be sheltered from the difficulties of life. Both lead to the same end result which is a massive state that regulates every aspect of our lives.
This is not to say there aren't legitimate concerns on both sides of the aisle, because each side is too quick to dismiss the concerns the other side has. Virtually every issue has been so utterly politicized that there's little room for rational discussion. Sometimes I wonder if it isn't intentional so that everyone is weakened by fighting amongst themselves and thus distracted from the real threat. Otherwise how is it that people keep re-electing the same old garbage into office over and over again?
Re:RTFS?? (Score:5, Interesting)
Bullshit. The Dixie Chicks have their views and we have ours. BTW, Pelosi says it is un-American to enforce our immigration laws. How does that grab you?
The Dixie Chicks have every right to speak their mind. I have every right to disagree with them and not give them any more money.
I do take offense when Americans go off to France, for example, and criticize our President or our country. All they are doing is selfishly making themselves more important at the expense of the rest of us. Its a kick in the teeth to the brave soldiers risking their lives for our safety.
Re:Flaws in our democracy (Score:3, Interesting)
There is a difference between something not being secret and it being public. It is possible for something not to be available to the general public, but still to be made available to officers of the court, for example the judge, jury, and the two sides' lawyers, but not entered into the official record unless the judge deemed it to be in the national interest.
There have been a lot of cases where some portion of a court proceeding is closed. Something similar should be possible for other state secrets. One solution I have seen proposed is a secrets registrar, where certain individuals are nominated by the general population, passed through a series of background checks and then allowed access to classified material. Any state secret that needs to be restricted from the general public for more than a short amount of time (say, one year) must be made available to secrets registrars, who are able to testify in court and may initiate legal proceedings to have certain matters declassified if it is in the national interest.
The problem is not so much keeping secrets, as keeping secrets with no oversight. Sovereign immunity, on the other hand, has no place in a free society. If something is illegal, it should be illegal for everyone. If there are certain cases where something is not illegal, then they should be codified into the specific law (e.g. shooting someone in self defence is not murder. Shooting someone for fun while President is).
Re:Ya know... (Score:3, Interesting)
There's a few ex-KGB people who insist that this is the result of years of infiltration by the Soviets into our education and political systems. I'm not sure whether I buy it, but it's hard to ignore that the result would be the same.
Re:RTFS?? (Score:4, Interesting)
Questions about Obama's citizenship and links to Islamic religious belief are canards.
Whether or not Obama's deficit spending and involvement in the affairs of private business constitute a step towards socialism or whether he will go along with gun control zealots in the Democratic party are not canards. They represent legitimate criticisms and legitimate fears.
The media, who have been some of the thirstiest consumers of the Obama-aide, have begun to leak very subtle criticisms of him, but only subtle ones, and Obama himself still engages in gross exaggeration of his critics positions (http://www.slate.com/id/2215631/).
It's still fairly early on in his presidency to have too many criticisms of Obama (although his spending is fair game), but in six months or so the "I'm still cleaning up after Bush" won't work.
Re:RTFS?? (Score:3, Interesting)
Wait, you mean that Presidents have prepared remarks and speechwriters?
I was referring to candidate Obama. Every media outlet (except Fox News, predictably) showered praise on him about how articulate and electrifying his speeches were, ignoring the times that he had to ad-lib and stuttered uncontrollably.
But even as President, Obama read someone else's speech, thanking himself before he caught the error. One has to wonder what he could be induced to say if someone were to hack the teleprompter.
I'm neither left or right wing. But, I think Obama is even an emptier suit than Bush.
Comment removed (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:RTFS?? (Score:5, Interesting)
I remember the story like it was yesterday. It sent chills down my spine. To say it wasn't the (then) presidents administration pushing the buttons is ridiculous.
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/g/a/2001/12/18/eguillermo.DTL [sfgate.com]
Re:RTFS?? (Score:3, Interesting)
Un-American? That's like saying the Boston Tea Party was "Un-British of them". Where would it have gotten us for the founding fathers to shut up and take it?
Sure the Dixie Chicks' actions didn't amount to more than a media stunt, but it's far from un-American.
Re:RTFS?? (Score:2, Interesting)
OMG there is so much wrong with your post.
The US is not at war and hasn't been for quite a few decades now, so....
Tell that to the guys over there getting shot at. Do you think it's any less of a war to them? How many of those guys planting road side bombs received comfort from Natalie Maines' words?
at which case we can never criticize the government or its executive officers at any time,
Tell that to Orwell. I posted his quote, not mine. Then again, what would the author of 1984 and Animal Farm know about totalitarianism.
not to mention that Texans managed to elect him as governor in their supreme wisdom
Twice! He was one Hell of a governor. He truly united both Democrats and Republicans in this state. He compromised and received compromise from the Democrats. Unfortunately, that doesn't work on a federal level. Take vouchers for example. You know, that program that gives money to poor kids so they can have the same opportunity as the rich kids? Opposed by Democrats because it had Bush's name on it.
And, my favorite:
[Bush] who was, indeed, one of the worst presidents to ever occupy the office
You must be too young to remember Carter, Nixon, Ford or Johnson, and too ignorant to know about of the other truly failed Presidents in America's history (like the other Johnson).
Remember Greenspan? You know, the guy who is credited with one of the largest economic expansions in US history? What President was he under again? (actually, it was four presidents, but the largest economic expansion happened under the last one.... well until Democrats took over Congress again)
Finally, as to your rant against Texas. Have you ever been here? You do realize that Texas is doing better economically than most of the nation right now?
Re:Flaws in our democracy (Score:3, Interesting)
If a bunch of undisciplined, underfunded hackers can make it work, why can't the army?
Besides, I think it would be a great psychological warfare tool - "If we were going to invade you, this is how we would do it. It doesn't matter that you know this, because you will be crushed." "If you attack us here, we will defend with these forces in these positions, plus other discretionary forces. We know this battle plan will defeat any attack."
Re:RTFS?? (Score:5, Interesting)
You think Bush gave a shit about sensitivity to the families of dead soldiers?
Yes. It's clear that he did. He personally wrote a letter to the family of *every* dead soldier, and never talked about that to the press, or used it politically. No president has even been so personally involved with each death. He might not have been in the black sedan with the two soldiers who knocked on the door at each family's house (worst job in the army), but it's clear he counted the cost.
Your zealotry makes you look like a real ass in the face of the facts.
Re:RTFS?? (Score:4, Interesting)
But you can't blame the lawyers for defending their client.
I'm not sure if the lawyer ever swears an oath to defend The Constitution, but his client sure has hell did. Lawyers who are aware of an intent to violate the law going forward are obligated to disclose that fact. These lawyers are obligated to make it clear that the government intends to continue infringing our right to petition for redress, and to continue infringing the Fourth Amendment. If they cannot make that clear, they have an obligation -- at least moral if not legal -- to recuse themselves or resign their position.
Dress it up in the beauty of the adversarial legal system all you like, but saying that these lawyers have no obligation to expose the intent to commit treason by their employers is as empty as any tool of a criminal organization claiming he was just doing what he was told.
Will they get convicted for failing to disclose their fore-knowledge of a future crime? Of course not -- they are failing to disclose a future crime that will never be seen as a crime by those who judge crime, because those who judge crime want absolute power just like this President and the one before him (and most of them since the original GW said he didn't want it). But that does not excuse them of their obligation -- it just means that they will not face any punishment for being accessories to treason.
They'll be as innocent as O.J. and Ted Stevens.
Re:RTFS?? (Score:3, Interesting)
Right... (Score:4, Interesting)