Alyrium Denryle wrote:His platform? Oh there certainly is. But if he is willing to back down on the 4th amendment, I cant trust anything that comes out of his mouth.
And so you'll sit at home in November and do nothing, effectively supporting a man whom
you know will conduct his administration as though Bush was still in office? I can understand why you feel betrayed by Obama's vote; although I defended the action, I never said that I approved of cloture, or any other part of the bill save the immunity. Nevertheless, whatever Obama's reasons, I do not feel disgruntled enough by this incident to believe that everything he's supported and said has been a lie. Even if Obama carries through with only a fifth of what he's promised to do, I'll be there to support him when the election comes.
He could have done that any number of ways, without punching the 4th amendment and the rule of law in the balls. It is one thing to SAY something to get elected during the general election. It is another to vote for cloture and then vote on a motion that is blatantly unconstitutional that the center indeed does not support.
I'm not privy to the political reasoning of Obama or his advisors; as I implied before, I'm not even sure if this move was political at all, although I can see how it may have been.
Where the fuck is the compromise? The Conservatives got everything they wanted, they got telecom immunity, they got their unconstitutional warrantless wiretaps, they got everything. What did they actually concede for this so-called compromise?
I was referring, albiet vaguely, to the trio of failed amendments that he voted for; clearly, his heart was not fully in the bill. However, I will not say that that excuses him for ultimately voting for the bill, and especially not for his decision to aid in cloture. You seemed to have inferred from my previous post that I approve of wire-tapping; I most emphatically do not. Indeed, I am confused as to why Obama approved the bill at all, and I await an explanation from him, if one has not already been provided.
No. THis shit is illegal. There is no "national crisis" short of foreign armies on our soil that justifies is. And the telecoms knew it. They consulted with lawyers before they made the decision to comply. Those lawyers undoubtedly told them that there were privacy laws in place specifically to avoid that intrusion. They knowingly participated in a criminal action perpetrated by the executive branch. A felony offense. They should be nailed to the wall. But instead, they are given a pass. Fuck that.
I was unaware that the precise circumstances around the governmental request and the corporations’ legal response were publically known. Could you provide a link to that information?
The bill of rights does not evaporate when we are threatened.
All the feds had to do was get warrants for specific individuals they wanted to target, with reasonable suspicion of terrorist activity. Hell, they even have a secret fucking court for the purpose. But no. They couldnt even bother with that. Enough is enough. Our civil liberties have been pissed on for the last 8 years, to the point that the nitrogen compounds have corroded the paper the bill of rights is printed on. And now, not only are we giving the federal government unprecedented surveillance power, the power to screen our every phone call or email through word filters and draw up watch lists, but we are giving the people that colluded with them when it WAS illegal (and constitutionally it still is) immunity. No. This has to stop. Otherwise we will edge closer and closer to fascism.
Once again, I never said that I approved of the government's wire-tapping and data mining programs. I find them repellant, and I think that every involved member of the administration should be prosecuted to the last extremity permitted by law. However, I am still inclined to shift blame from them. This administration has shown an excessive proclivity for deception and strong-arm tactics, and unless evidence to the contrary is provided, I am inclined to believe that the companies acted in "good faith" under the rationale provided for them