tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9247604.post113864225641115291..comments2023-08-12T11:48:14.237-04:00Comments on Insomnious Politico: Suicide PactJasMarshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16354457022511599465noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9247604.post-1138849065340935962006-02-01T21:57:00.000-05:002006-02-01T21:57:00.000-05:00The wiretapping case has been framed incorrectly.T...The wiretapping case has been framed incorrectly.<BR/><BR/>The Feds ARE NOT tapping the phones of American citizens. They are not listening to your phone, or mine or Michael Moore's, or even Cindy Sheehan's, digging for dirt.<BR/><BR/>The Feds ARE tapping calls made INTO the United States from OVERSEAS. Therefore, warrants are IRRELEVANT in this case, unless the Democrats want to attempt to argue that al Qaeda terrorists should be granted Constitutional rights, which wouldn't surprise me in the least.<BR/><BR/>Get it straight.<BR/><BR/>Liberals are interested in POWER. End of story. They can't argue policy because Liberal ideology is (1) flawed and (2) based on emotion. <BR/><BR/>The national pastime of Liberalville is vacuity.Kenthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02772870279966927802noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9247604.post-1138824343738964772006-02-01T15:05:00.000-05:002006-02-01T15:05:00.000-05:00The poll to which Al-9000 refers that was fifty-fi...The poll to which Al-9000 refers that was fifty-fifty was probably the slanted New York Times polling data. Not only did they probably ask "all adults" as opposed to "registered voters" which demonstrably skews the result left, the wording of the question was shady. Something like "are you in favor of the president listening in on your everyday phone conversations" rather than "would you be in favor of the government listening in on suspected terrorists placing calls from outside the country into the country". If this question is presented correctly, not to mention asked of those of us who actually vote exclusively, the results would be overwhelming in favor of wiretapping calls made either from or to overseas by suspected terrorists. Furthermore the very fact that one end of the phone call is overseas discounts the program from being considered "Domestic spying". To be considered domestic the entire business would have to have taken place within the border. As soon as other countries become involved the classification "international" applies. Calling this domestic spying is just a scare tactic by the left or any one opposed to this valuable anti terror tool. Anyone against this form of security is in favor of making it easier for terrorists to operate within this country. You wanna skew the poll in a positive way? Ask Americans, "are you in favor of making it easier for terrorists to coordinate operations remotely from outside the country?" Any one with a goddamn brain would answer no yet this debate rages on.JasMarshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16354457022511599465noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9247604.post-1138823225873004692006-02-01T14:47:00.000-05:002006-02-01T14:47:00.000-05:00This is they way its been forever, as far as I kno...This is they way its been forever, as far as I know, you need a warrant to tap an American citizen on a call in America. Maybe I don't understand the issue, or maybe it will be twisted by spin-doctors until it seems like it was all just a miscommunication! Oh, you meant spying on terrorists in other countries? Why didn't you say so? Oops.<BR/><BR/>Of course, anyone can frame a question to get an answer. And, I brought up the poll because I thought it skewed to the right, because I wanted to show that many people support YOUR SIDE of the argument, not the "liberal side", which in this case would probably be better described as the "libertarian" side because it aims to defend the individual rights of American citizens.<BR/><BR/>If they were liberals framing the question and the best they could do is 50/50, they must be morons. Obviously, the question you and I are debating is not "how can we frame a question to get a certain response?” the question is one of political theory, "where do you<BR/>draw the line on individual rights in wartime*? * (by wartime, we mean ALL THE TIME for at least the next 50 years)<BR/><BR/>All Bush has to do is show that they are carefully justifying the people they tap according to SOME KIND of legal procedure, and IT WOULDN'T BE AN ISSUE.<BR/><BR/>DIGRESSION - This whole approach of challenging everything as a liberal media creation is so predictable. This is why I hate arguing politics, because nowadays nobody wants to argue about theory, only about how the "facts" were manipulated by some news org or political spin-doctor. We are now in the age of "no facts". Or let me get this straight; there are no facts except what Bush says? I think some org's and people are biased to the left and some to the right. Fox for example is biased to the right. If you deny that, you are clearly lost in the fog of the relentless rightie propaganda you subscribe to daily. How is that different from the mindless liberals who believe everything they read in the NY Times? I bring up a poll that is 50/50 and you say it's slanted. My point was, it's a divisive issue that divides Americans into two pretty even groups! Apparently even that can't be accepted.<BR/><BR/>One of my favorite writers is Mark Twain and he wrote a great thing: (paraphrasing) "there are no permanent truth seekers, only temporary ones. Once a man has found his truth, he spends the rest of his life propping and boarding it up with whatever he can find." I guess the difference between you and me is I am still a pathetic truth-seeker,<BR/>while you have found your truth. I actually envy you! Things must be so clear now. You always know where to come down on any issue. And if you're not sure you can always turn on Fox and figure it out.<BR/><BR/>BACK TO THE ISSUE AT HAND - I support tapping of any phone lines, if the person involved is a suspected terrorist - and the way you justify who is a suspect is by getting a warrant from a judge, or at least being held accountable SOMEHOW, by the law of the land. We are a country of LAWS. Everybody knows that when you give the executive<BR/>branch absolute power, bad things happen.<BR/><BR/>And if the warrant-getting process is too slow, make a special court just for terrorist wiretaps. That is such a lame excuse. If you don't have enough evidence, you don't have enough evidence. Is this a Hollywood movie where the rogue cops have taken over? Damn, why didn't we think of this fifty years ago? Cops could have busted all the bad guys all these years, but it took 9-11 to make us realize the error of our stupid belief in protecting people's rights!<BR/><BR/>If you are ready to hand your blind trust over to a giant bureaucracy, it's probably because you're not Arab or Muslim and no one is going to tap your phone. Newsflash, 99% of the Arab Muslims in America have nothing to do with terrorism. Where do YOU draw the line? And don't try to bring up the "slippery slope" argument, I am seriously asking if you believe in individual rights. IF you do believe that some rights are unalienable even during wartime, what rights are those?<BR/><BR/>What if "big brother" tapped phones without a warrant to find who is buying all the kind bud? Then you'd have to go libertarian on us. But seriously, I don't even know why you need to defend your rights; I think you trust the government more than anyone I've ever known. Is Bush that convincing? Is the CIA some elite agency full of geniuses? Is the NSA made up of superhero guardians that are there to safeguard your rights while you are sleeping? How about the FBI, they could never screw anything up. What makes you so confident in the law enforcement arm of the executive branch to act without any supervision? Did you meet a really nice spy one time or something? Did fox news report that everyone in law enforcement is infallible?<BR/><BR/>What's so hard about getting a warrant? Does it really take forever? Is it that hard to justify why this person is suspected? The truth is it probably is hard to get a warrant because you need that pesky thing called "evidence". It's part of the law of the land, you may have heard of it (think before 9-11 - and as if that was the beginning of the war, doesn't anyone remember the 80's?). Isn't this one of the checks and balances in the constitution, that keeps the US from having secret police like the Nazis, Russians, prewar Japanese, and North Koreans? Why do you think the NSA has forever been banned from doing this (as a cynic, I always assumed they did it anyway, but now the president is admitting it. Whatever happened to plausible deniability?).<BR/><BR/>I really support hardcore military measures, more than most people, I believe war is necessary for governments to defend their interests, I support the war in Iraq, and I support Marcinko-ism, but if you trust the government this much, you are naive and he'd be the first to tell you. Didn't Marcinko have to get foreign intelligence services to spy<BR/>domestically for him because of this very issue? Marcinko would be all for unlimited wiretapping, because he is a warrior, not a politician, and he has no agenda except killing tangos. He cares not about the constitution, nor does he have to argue about it. He is<BR/>secret. And we are to believe he is a righteous, good person who is always right about the bad guys, always has the right "hunch", who would never cross the line...maybe you think the government is full of Marcinko's?<BR/><BR/>Also, I know you love duality and black and white arguments, but unfortunately everything is not the liberal vs. conservative issue you make it out to be. Of course, the two sides want to paint it that way, but that is just a method of angling for votes from the<BR/>mesmerized masses. I think it was not long ago that Republicans were the party of individual rights and smaller government, I guess before the Christian fundamentalists took over. This is a constitutional issue. I'd have to bet all the people that support unwarranted wiretapping are not Muslim. What do they have to worry about?<BR/><BR/>Clearly you left the libertarian, small government thinking behind (or maybe I'm crazy and you never thought that way) in your zealous defense of Bush. In his speech last night, everything was pretty consistently unarguable stuff, and almost libertarian...smaller<BR/>government, tax cuts, solve social security, solve health care, increase science education, ease our dependence on oil (and did you know this is the rallying cry of the "liberals" you hate?), let the generals run the war...all except the wiretapping. He didn't justify it at all - it was bizarre. He could have said, listen, this is not "big brother", we have a chain of command that is set in stone for deciding who to tap, we are very very careful about it and when people are tapped wrongly, heads are going to roll. Or he could have said, well getting warrants is just too slow, by that time, the terrorists will have struck. Or he could have said (like you) that it's not what you think, really we just tapping foreigners who call into the US, or he could have said that we've always done this secretly but we are admitting it...anything. Seems like, he needs to avoid the details because otherwise people would say, set up a special court, or do this or that to avoid trampling on rights. NO big deal.<BR/><BR/>And yes, I could barely make it through the entire speech, not because he's Bush but because talk is just talk, he looks like a monkey reading some writer's speech, (it's not like it's an inspired speech or anything), and we all know he is angling for votes. Nothing that he said will have any affect on anything unless it is backed up, and<BR/>by the time that happens the election will be over.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com