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Wednesday, January 25, 2006

This is huge. In 2002, Bush administration OPPOSED legislation to make it easier to wiretap under FISA



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The Bush Administration opposed legislation that would have given them the very power they now claim they needed, power they now claim they didn't have under FISA. It's because they didn't have this power, they now claim, that they had to break the law and spy without a warrant. But this law would have given them much of the legal power they wanted. Yet they said they didn't need it, and worse yet, that the proposed legislation was likely unconstitutional. But now we know they did it anyway.

And it was all discovered by a blogger, and now it's a big story in Thursday's Washington Post and LA Times. Amazing.

And when you read through the story, below, note what the administration NOW says. They claim the new legislation wouldn't have gone far enough. Really? First, the administration said at the time that the legislation went too far and wasn't needed, so bull.

Second, the Bush administration now is changing their story and claiming that they opposed the legislation because it wouldn't have permitted them to snoop as much as they wanted. But back in 2002 the Bush people said that even the lesser-snooping-power in the proposed legislation was likely unconstitutional. So if the lesser power was likely unconstitutional, imagine how unconstitutional Bush's ACTUAL domestic spying program was and is? A program that by the Bush administration's own admission went (and goes) far beyond what the proposed proposed law would have allowed.

And what's more, the proposed legislation that the Bush administration thought might be unconstitutional, that law applied only to the Bush administration spying on foreigners, NOT Americans. If it was likely unconstitutional for them to use the proposed law to spy on foreigners, imagine how unconstitutional that law would have been had it been applied to Americans? But the Bush warrantless spying WAS on Americans, and by their own admission went FAR beyond the proposed unconstitutional law.

So Bush chose to break the law when he had an alternative. And what's worse, this suggests that Bush feared the Supreme Court would never let him spy on Americans the degree to which he wanted, the court would find it unconstitutional, so that's why Bush never sought the change in the law proposed in 2002 - Bush thought it would have been struck down by the Supreme Court. So Bush chose to break the law in order to circumvent the Supreme Court enforcing the US Constitution.

This is huge.

Glenn, the blogger who broke this, makes one more important point:
And its claim that Congress knew of and approved of its FISA-bypassing eavesdrop program is plainly negated by the fact that the same Congress was debating whether such changes should be effectuated and then refused to approve much less extreme changes to FISA than what the Administration secretly implemented on its own (and which it now claims Congress authorized).
Read on. Read the rest of this post...

MSNBC's Chris Matthews attacks liberals for something they didn't do



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Surprise! Read the rest of this post...

10,000 Careers Ended By "Don't Ask, Don't Tell"



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Not only are the lives of over 10,000 Americans destroyed by "Don't Ask, Don't Tell", it's costing the American taxpayer plenty. From AP via Army Times:
Hundreds of officers and health care professionals have been discharged in the past 10 years under the Pentagon's policy on gays, a loss that while relatively small in numbers involves troops who are expensive for the military to educate and train.

The 350 or so affected are a tiny fraction of the 1.4 million members of the uniformed services and about 3.5 percent of the more than 10,000 people discharged under the "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy since its inception in 1994.

But many were military school graduates or service members who went to medical school at the taxpayers' expense - troops not as easily replaced by a nation at war that is struggling to fill its enlistment quotas.

"You don't just go out on the street tomorrow and pluck someone from the general population who has an Air Force education, someone trained as a physician, someone who bleeds Air Force blue, who is willing to serve, and that you can put in Iraq tomorrow," said Beth Schissel, who graduated from the Air Force Academy in 1989 and went on to medical school.

Schissel was forced out of the military after she acknowledged that she was gay.
...
"What advantage is the military getting by firing brain surgeons at the very time our wounded soldiers aren't receiving the medical care they need?" said Aaron Belkin, associate professor of political science at the University of California at Santa Barbara.
Good question. Clearly the answer for Republicans is that bigotry is worth more than human lives. Read the rest of this post...

Santorum blows his stack at reporter in public today



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AMERICAblog's spies on the Hill tell us that at 4:34pm Eastern today (gotta love their precision) Senator Rick Santorum (R-PA) "totally blew his top, totally lost control" while getting off the underground train that connects the US Capitol building and the Dirksen Senate Office Builing.

It seems a reporter approached Santorum just as he got off the train and asked Santorum something to the effect of: "Can you tell me about the 'K Street Project.""

Santorum's response?

He started screaming, according to our source. "It's just a meeting!", Santorum reportedly yelled (again, in public, right near the Senate cafeteria where lots of folks are gathered). "What Harry Reid said Wednesday [when he announed the Democrats' ethics reform package] is a total lie!"

In fact, the K Street Project is an infamous little conspiracy that Tom Delay created back in the 1990s, and Santorum is the Senate's liaison to that little conspiracy. Thus the reason Ricky isn't too happy about being asked about it:
HOW THE K STREET PROJECT WORKED: In his dealings with K Street lobbyists, DeLay explicitly stated he would operate by “the old adage of punish your enemies and reward your friends.” (To gain influence over legislation, trade associations and corporate lobbyists were ordered to do three things: 1) refuse to hire Democrats, 2) hire only deserving Republicans as identified by the congressional leadership, and 3) contribute heavily to Republican coffers.) Despite being admonished by the House Ethics Committee numerous times for his conduct, DeLay’s pay-to-play machine continued to plow full-speed ahead. With federal benefits up for sale, corporations quickly identified the need to need to hire more lobbyists, giving rise to one of the greatest growth industries in America. Grover Norquist, head of Americans for Tax Reform, proudly proclaimed in 2002 that [conservatives] “will have 90-10 [percentage advantage in staffing] on K Street and 90-10 business giving.”
Someone isn't eating their Wheaties if a simple reporter's question is making them blow their stack in public.

Find out more about the "just a meeting" from NPR here. Read the rest of this post...

Blogger is supposedly down for 15 minutes starting at 7pm Eastern tonight



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They're doing maintenance, so don't be shocked if we disappear for 15 minutes (or more...) Read the rest of this post...

Hardball's advertiser contacts and MSNBC contacts



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Boycott MSNBC's "Hardball"



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It's begun.



http://www.openlettertochrismatthews.com
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Washington Post, in rare moment of clarity, admonishes Bush for not coming clean about Abramoff



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Hey, even a broken clock is right two times a day:
It's undisputed that Mr. Abramoff tried to use his influence, and his restaurant and his skyboxes and his chartered jets, to sway lawmakers and their staffs. Information uncovered by Mr. Bush's own Justice Department shows that Mr. Abramoff tried to do the same inside the executive branch.

Under these circumstances, asking about Mr. Abramoff's White House meetings is no mere exercise in reportorial curiosity but a legitimate inquiry about what an admitted felon might have been seeking at the highest levels of government. Whatever White House officials did or didn't do, there is every reason to believe that Mr. Abramoff was up to no good and therefore every reason the public ought to know with whom he was meeting.
You know, it's a bit late for the Washington Post to complain that President Bush is acting like he's above the law. The Washington Post and most of the traditional media enabled Bush, helped him get to where he is today by not questioning his repeated lies, his repeated over-reaching for more and more power, to hell with the law, and now that the chickens come home to roost, the Post is suddenly shocked - I say, shocked - that George Bush is refusing to come clean.

You get the president you enable. Read the rest of this post...

Bob Casey, kind of an idiot



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Unfortunately, our best chance for throwing out Rick Santorum in the next election is Bob Casey, a "Democrat" who's just this side of Joe Lieberman. Casey just came out in support of Alito.

Very sad.

We really need to get to the point where people like Lieberman and Casey are forced to get with the program or get out of the party. If they want to be Democrats, then be Democrats. But stop playing this pseudo-Republican game. Alito is the perfect opportunity for Democrats like Casey to define how they are different from whackjobs like Santorum. But instead, Casey pulls a Lieberman in order to show he's really not that different from the Republicans, really he's not.

Will I continue to support Casey over Santorum? Define "support." Would I vote for Casey if I lived in Pennsylvania? Yes. Will I pull out all stops to help Casey? Unlikely.

What Mr. Casey needs to learn is that the game isn't decided simply by saying "the Santorum-haters have nobody else to support, ha ha ha." We can still be dispirited by your candidacy, and sit back and not help very much, and write lots of bad things about you on a regular basis because you often kind of make us sick. That will affect your fundraising, your media, and your get-out-the-vote. And if you don't think any of that matters, then you don't deserve to be a Senator.

If Casey beats Santorum, yes that helps the Democrats take over the Senate. But a Senator Casey will be another Lieberman, screwing us every time he gets up to vote. And that's something we'll tolerate only so long. Mr. Casey might want to watch what Joe Lieberman goes through this spring as we all support his Democratic opponent in the primary. Casey could be next. Read the rest of this post...

McCain won't say Bush didn't break the law



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The White House is been in overdrive to convince Americans that the domestic spying program was legal. They are trying way too hard. And here's why: if Bush didn't follow the law, he broke the law:
Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., told NBC’s “Today” show Wednesday that he’s not sure if the president went beyond legislation passed after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

“I don't know the answer, that’s why I welcome the hearings,” McCain said.

Authorities should be able to eavesdrop, McCain said, but the scope of the program needs to be examined. Lawmakers need answers to questions like “what is the extent” and “who's being listened to,” he added.

Asked if the program should be referred to as domestic spying or terrorist surveillance, McCain said: “I don't know, that’s why I'm glad the president said he welcomes hearings.”
This sure steps on Bush's p.r. visit to the NSA where he's thanking them for spying on the rest of us. Read the rest of this post...

Wednesday Morning Open Thread



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We haven't done any open threading for awhile...so talk. Read the rest of this post...

Bush domestic spying (google version) impacting American internet users



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The intrusiveness of the Bush Administration into the lives of the American people continues unabated: domestic spying, cell phones, Terri Schiavo. They can call it whatever they want, the Bush Administration is spying on American people. Now, we learn from the New York Times that Americans are becoming wary and cautious about using the internet:
The government has been more aggressive recently in its efforts to obtain data on Internet activity, invoking the fight against terrorism and the prosecution of online crime. A surveillance program in which the National Security Agency intercepted certain international phone calls and e-mail in the United States without court-approved warrants prompted an outcry among civil libertarians. And under the antiterrorism USA Patriot Act, the Justice Department has demanded records on library patrons' Internet use.

Those actions have put some Internet users on edge, as they confront the complications and contradictions of online life.
This is what we've become under the Bush regime. This article is something you'd expect under the Soviets or Communist China:
"It's scary to think that it may just be a matter of time before Googling will invite an F.B.I. agent to tap your phone or interrogate you," Ms. Farrell said.
And, I know this sounds crazy, but do you think it has occurred to any Democrat that privacy might be a major issue? Read the rest of this post...

Another DeLay scandal?



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Oh no! Who could believe that DeLay might have been tied up with disgraced Congressman Duke Cunningham and even more funny money? It's nice to see GOP Majority Leader candidate Blunt in the mix as well. Keeping the spirit of DeLay alive for the team. What a guy.
Subpoenas were issued last week to Adams and Max Gelwix, PerfectWave's president and CEO. The subpoenas sought records of any communications between DeLay, Cunningham, House Majority Whip Roy Blunt of Missouri and Wilkes over federal legislation that may have benefited Adams and his businesses.
Read the rest of this post...

Lieberman wants Democrats to think he's still a Democrat



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Must be getting closer to election time and since that job with the Bush administration didn't work out, Leiberman now wants people to think that he's not just another Bush suck-up and excuse maker. Sure, his criticism of Bush doing nothing about Katrina is fine but this guy ought to just make it official and leave the party and join Fox News or AEI. Read the rest of this post...


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