19 May 2006

Hayden Would Run The CIA With The Expectation Of Impunity?

There is much review of these confirmation hearings to follow but I wanted to single out this point.

"It's time to move past what seems to me to be an endless picking apart of the archaeology of every past intelligence success or failure," Hayden said. "CIA officers . . . deserve recognition of their efforts, and they also deserve not to have every action analyzed, second-guessed and criticized on the front pages of the morning paper."

Well that about "confirms" it for me. Who in their right mind would want anyone at the head of the CIA who states so clearly that the agency "deserves" a free pass on any and all actions? No one should analyze their actions? Do not presume to second-guess them? The CIA is a conduit for the long arm of the administration. I don't think anyone would argue with that. They follow orders. And they are under some blanket of impunity? Why doesn't he just come out and say "The CIA is bigger than all of you and I would sit at the helm as master of all secrets and wield my power at the pleasure of the President without you pesky journalists bothering me with some silly issue of legality"

He goes on to say that he, of course, agrees with a level of accountability but that, General Hayden, is an empty statement when your (the agency's) actions are consistent with the wishes of the administration and the administration is grossly unfamiliar with being forthright. You don't tell Congress (in any real way) what you are up to. That leaves only the media as well as other American citizens to hold you accountable and we will.

Do not tell me I don't have the right to question you.


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15 May 2006

Welcome To My New Renter!

Squib of "Shooting In The Dark" was a very easy decision for me. Before I even really looked through the blog I see "rabid online poker player". Me too, Me too! (I am a shameful addict). Then I see "marketing professional". Wow, two for two now! Although, I am careful about mentioning that I run a small marketing / merchant services firm - Marketers are persona non grata lately. Where ever did we go wrong? Then I see "politically active". Well, that seals it.

I love that he devotes a small post to a Bush quote that still slays me. When Bush was asked what the best moment of his Presidency was, he said: "I would say the best moment of all was when I caught a 7.5 pound perch in my lake," (scroll down a bit to his post "Another Great Moment during the "W" Presidency").

Don't miss his "4 Years ago today" post. Here he talks to us about losing his father. He is so wonderfully honest about his relationship with his father; how siblings have the same parents but far different relationships with them; the complications of family dynamics; and sacrifices that were made in navigating the loss.

Yes, this too struck a very familiar chord with me but can be appreciated by all.

Shooting In The Dark has so much to offer. Squib is politically motivated but his blog is not myopic. His tag line is "represents the random thoughts of a man who is beginning to move slightly to the other side of the fulcrum of life." You can feel him doing this with a variety of tones - serious thoughts, honesty, wit, humor and soft sarcasm.

Pay him a visit...I am very glad I did.

13 May 2006

US: The Largest Target In The War On Terror

The nation with the largest number of individuals under the umbrella of suspicion? The United States. Tens of millions of US citizens, trillions - I said trillions of calls being tracked. Mr. Maniacal's President's largest effort in his "Imma gonna get me sum evil-doers" plan is right here at home. He might be the only sitting President to be at war with his own country. But hey, this guy is all about pushing the envelope.

The 2001 Joint Resolution Authorizing The Use Of Military Force (AUMF)

To authorize the use of United States Armed Forces against those responsible for the recent attacks launched against the United States.

IN GENERAL- That the President is authorized to use all necessary and appropriate force against those nations, organizations, or persons he determines planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001, or harbored such organizations or persons, in order to prevent any future acts of international terrorism against the United States by such nations, organizations or persons.

Just before the Senate acted on (AUMF), the White House sought one last change. Literally minutes before the Senate cast its vote, the administration sought to add the words "in the United States and" after "appropriate force" in the agreed-upon text. This last-minute change would have given the president broad authority to exercise expansive powers not just overseas - where we all understood he wanted authority to act - but right here in the United States. It wasn't granted.

See: Power We Didn't Grant

While we were still collecting our dead from the 9-11 attacks, the occupier the oval office was trying to structure his "war powers" to include using this country and its people as personal playthings in his war games.

I read somewhere yesterday that we are on "outrage overload". I think that is such an accurate description. We may find it easier to just put our heads in our hands and resign ourselves to complete powerlessness when it comes to this administration. Instead, it is my hope that we will take a deep breath, remind ourselves that this will require arduous review of all the information, and to remind ourselves that our greatest display patriotism is to make a firm commitment to support the protection of US citizens and our democracy.

The following represents the requisite study in determining whether US citizens have legal and Constitutional protections against the actions of this administration:

Fourth Amendment

Unanimously, the Court has held that at least in cases of domestic subversive investigations, compliance with the warrant provisions of the Fourth Amendment was required. The Government's duty to preserve the national security does not override the guarantee that before government could invade the privacy of its citizens it must present to a neutral magistrate evidence sufficient to support issuance of a warrant authorizing that invasion of privacy. This protection was even more needed in ''national security cases'' than in cases of ''ordinary'' crime, the Justice continued, inasmuch as the tendency of government so often is to regard opponents of its policies as a threat and hence to tread in areas protected by the First Amendment as well as by the Fourth. Rejected also was the argument that courts could not appreciate the intricacies of investigations in the area of national security nor preserve the secrecy which is required.

FCC
Communications Act (47 U.S.C. 222)
Stored Communications Act (18 U.S.C. 2702(c), 2703 (c).)

The Federal Communications Commission is an independent federal agency responsible directly to Congress. Established by the Communications Act of 1934.

Under this Act, telephone companies are prohibited from giving out information regarding their customers' calling habits: whom a person calls, how often and what routes those calls take to reach their final destination. Inbound calls, as well as wireless calls, also are covered. The Federal Communications Commission, the nation's top telecommunications regulatory agency, can levy fines of up to $130,000 per day per violation, with a cap of $1.325 million per violation.

FISA

While the law provides several means for the government to obtain records showing what phone numbers were called or dialed by a particular phone number, in every instance, either a subpoena or court order is required. If the NSA used a pen register or trap and trace device in real time, it was required to obtain an order from the FISA court, either under the specific pen register provisions, 50 USC 1841 et seq. or under the provisions for electronic surveillance generally, 50 USC 1801 et seq. Under the electronic surveillance provisions, the NSA would have to show the court that the person whose calls were being targeted was an agent of a foreign power. Under the pen register provision, the NSA would have to show the court that the information was relevant to an ongoing terrorism investigation. Despite the low standard for a pen register, it is unlikely that the FISA court would have approved wholesale pen registers on every phone in America. If the NSA obtained stored records, rather using a real time pen register, it would have to obtain an order from the FISA court under section 215 of the Patriot Act. It is important to note that the Patriot Act specifically provided that the FBI did not need a court order, but could use a National Security Letter - a form of administrative subpoena - to obtain such records. The Congress specifically withheld such subpoena authority from the NSA.

Article II of the U.S. Constitution (Executive Power)

The administration also argues that the program is authorized by the President's Article II role as Commander in Chief, relying upon the notion that the Commander in Chief can conduct a war, including authorizing domestic surveillance, as he sees fit. The President's Article II power is not exclusive; his conduct remains subject to regulating statutes enacted pursuant to Congress's Article I authority, such as FISA. The very existence of FISA shows the intent to keep the President in check, to regulate and limit his executive power.

###

The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) is a leader in taking action. They filed a class-action lawsuit against AT&T on January 31, 2006, accusing the telecom giant of violating the law and the privacy of its customers by collaborating with the National Security Agency (NSA) in its massive and illegal program to wiretap and data-mine Americans' communications.

THE LATEST ON THAT LAWSUIT - Yesterday - The United States government filed a "Statement of Interest" in the Electronic Frontier Foundation's (EFF's) class-action lawsuit against AT&T, announcing that the government would "assert the military and state secrets privilege" and "intervene to seek dismissal" of the case.

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12 May 2006

Qwest - The ONLY one to Just Say No

Qwest - the only major player who said NO to spying.

Qwest's top executives and lawyers were concerned about the legal issues, consumer privacy issues and possible fines that might be assessed if customer information was inappropriately turned over to the NSA.

Through the cooperation by the other three carriers, the NSA had the country covered except for parts of Qwest's 14-state local phone region.

The NSA reportedly put pressure on Qwest by suggesting its lack of cooperation not only could harm national security but possibly affect the company's ability to get classified work with the government.

Of course Qwest was threatened, are we surprised?

Qwest stood up against the big bully and stood squarely on the side of their customer. Please don't take lightly what Qwest has done. They were under enormous pressure and still decided to protect the privacy of their customers, and decided not to be a part of blurring the lines of legality.

Here is some information on Qwest and I encourage all to look into switching. It looks like there is limited service area, but it would be best for you to go to the site and complete the form indicating service type and area to get exact information.

Qwest Website

Approximately 40,000 employees
770,000 wireless customers
1.48 million DSL customers
4.778 million long-distance customers
Approximately 14.7 million access lines
More than 155,000 route miles of fiber optic network capacity

Qwest Headquarters

1801 California St
Denver, CO 80202
phone: (303) 992-1400
fax: (303) 992-1724
www.qwest.com

Ticker Symbol
NYSE: Q

Chairman and CEO
Richard C. Notebaert

Board of Directors
Richard C. Notebaert
Linda G. Alvarado
Philip F. Anschutz
Charles L. Biggs
Dane Brooksher
Cannon Y. Harvey
Peter S. Hellman
Wayne W. Murdy
Frank P. Popoff
James A. Unruh

Media Contact
Qwest News Bureau
(800) 256-1410
qnews@qwest.com

Qwest Products and Services Factsheet (download link for PDF file)

FOX Top Story

This is sure not earth shattering, but...

With the war in Iraq
With the standoff with Iran
With the discovery that this administration wants us to believe nearly every American household has suspected links to Al Qaeda...

Yesterday, FOX proudly poses the question: What is the top story of day? (add super special graphics and music)

American Idol

Yep. The shocking turn of events on an entertainment game show was yesterday's top news story.

Is it FOX? Is it their viewers? Is it simply evidence of the minute percentage of Americans who are truly engaged and interested in what the hell is happening in their country?

10 May 2006

Gun-Toting-Liberal - THE RIGHT VOICE FOR THE LEFT BLOGOSPHERE

The Blogosphere is A-BUZZ with the latest from my good friend, The Gun-Toting-Liberal.

He is no stranger to the concept of the left killing their own. Here he navigates the realities for a liberal blogger who is just not liberal enough for the radical left blogosphere.

Nobody can do it like the Gun-Toting Liberal. This is NOT TO BE MISSED!


09 May 2006

The Normalcy Of War Crimes

I have deeply pondered these words today...

Even before Hannah Arendt coined her ironic phrase, the "banality of evil," George Orwell called attention to the normalcy of war crimes in the 20th century, and he wrote extensively about the power of nationalism in destroying the essential decency of civilized, democratic peoples. Nationalism creates a culture of impunity that makes atrocities invisible, if not acceptable. No republic in time of war has ever held its own leaders accountable for war crimes committed in its name. One prod of the nerve of nationalism, and the plainest facts can be denied. If one harbors anywhere in one's mind a nationalistic loyalty or hatred, certain facts, although in a sense known to be true, are inadmissible. For the nationalist, actions are held to be good or bad, not on their own merits, but according to who does them. And there is almost no kind of outrage -- torture, the use of hostages forced labor, mass deportations, imprisonment without trial, forgery, assassination, the bombing of civilians -- which does not change its moral color when it is committed by 'our' side. The nationalist not only does not disapprove of atrocities committed by his own side, but he has a remarkable capacity for not even hearing about them.

Both Orwell and Arendt believed that, when great wrongs have taken place, it is the duty of moral men and women to call attention to such acts regardless of who actually commits them.

*excerpt from U.S. War Crimes in Iraq: A Prima Facie Case Respectfully submitted to the International Criminal Court. By Paul Rockwell - Oakland, California

06 May 2006

Little Blue And Red Boxes

I believe my readers know me as a political dissenter and an outspoken voice from the left. I am so because my political proclivities very naturally subscribe me to the liberal tenets. However, that is not a one-size-fits-all absolute. I will not sacrifice independent thought in the interest of being a good liberal soldier. As strongly as I have and will battle against the radical right, I welcome times where right and left can meet. When did so many start resisting that instead of facilitating it? When did so many go willingly into those little blue and red boxes, hypnotically agreeing to support that which fell inside their box and oppose anything outside of it. I find this to be a fairly pervasive mentality among the strongly politically motivated.

I am not insulting anyone here. I say that clearly because the response I expect from this is mainly arguments as to which side is more guilty of this. That of course proves my point. I more want to convey that, as with all opinions I publish here, it is based on my body of experience and the conditions that exist in the spaces I occupy.

With no plan or agenda, I have often found myself outside of my little blue box, having made decisions on certain issues with no regard for what side of the aisle they fall on.

Without going into great detail on the particular issues, the most recent was my last piece on the oil industry. The discussion here has been wonderful but initial responses to it published elsewhere were angry ones from the left suggesting I "just call myself a red and go publish at RedState" and calling the piece "spamming for conservatives". Oh dear, in writing that piece I was definitely being a bad liberal. A more memorable example was the Terri Schiavo case. I'm sure all of us recognize the many legal and moral intricacies surrounding Terri Schiavo's life and death. None of them escaped me and I could not condone the killing of this woman and fiercely fought against it.

This was not me yielding to the "conservative position". It was MY passionately held position. Many on "my side" castigated me for that. And again, their main argument? How could any respectable liberal take a conservative position like this? It was mind numbing really to have accusations of being a bad liberal so far over-shadow the issue itself. Many on the right just considered me some sort of fraud. As if to say, how could this liberal, lesbian, tree-hugging democrat agree with us on anything - we are not going to listen to her. These were groups that made decisions based on the box - solely on a prescribed ideology. But an interesting dynamic occurred with a small group from the right and a small group from the left. We marveled at the joining. It was like suddenly having this odd new friend and there were a million new and fresh things to talk about. Even our differences became just that - differences, not divides. And the voice behind our battle became stronger and somehow more validated.

These small groups from both sides are now my centrists. They can be left or right. The distinction being they don't live in those boxes. They represent a place where the two sides can meet and work, not to win their argument but in accord for progress.


The Aim of an Argument ... should not be victory, but progress. ~Joseph Joubert~ (1754-1824) (A French philosopher whose aim was to note in terse and clear sentences the necessity, utility, and beauty of virtue.)