Gore's Speech Yesterday

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  • thesightless
    Someone will marry me. Hell Yeah!
    • Jun 2004
    • 13567

    #16
    Re: Gore's Speech Yesterday

    superdave, dont group me in with an asinine idea liek they are helping the terrorists. they arent, not in any way at all, i just think< OUTSIDE OF IRAQ< they are too soft on dealing with them.

    and toasty, i dont care if they get a warrant, like i said, do whatever they have to stop it, without going into a military state where we are all treated like ""opposition suspects"". if a guy is calling his brother in kirkut, and not doing anything at all, i still think its worth the caution of checking it out.
    your life is an occasion, rise to it.

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    • superdave
      Platinum Poster
      • Jun 2004
      • 1366

      #17
      Re: Gore's Speech Yesterday

      Originally posted by toasty
      With all due respect, no shit. Who is arguing this point? It's not Gore, by the way. If you look back at his speech and his voting record, you'll note that he voted for FISA, which allows for wiretaps, and immediate ones at that. I can't fucking believe I'm standing up for Al Gore, but there you have it. The Act speaks for itself, though, regardless of what we think of Gore.

      In the numerous threads on this topic, I have yet to hear anyone answer the simple question I've posed above, and have alluded to in other posts. Rather than restate it yet again, I'll quote myself:



      If anyone can offer a good explanation for this, I'd love to hear it. At this point, though, I'd settle for ANY explanation, because up to this point all I've heard is people like yourself rely upon the self-evident point that we ought to be able to conduct wiretaps when an exigency exists without stopping to get a warrant first -- which FISA explicitly allows.

      Any takers?
      I've heard reporters ask the same question and the Bush Admin.supporter response is that FISA is NOT a rubber stamp court and going through the FISA process can be complicated and hinder investigations due to the process of obtaining the warrant.

      Now, how true that is, I'm not sure, but I'll side with the people trying to stop the terrorists.
      Never interrupt your enemy when he's making a mistake - Napoleon Bonaparte

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      • toasty
        Sir Toastiness
        • Jun 2004
        • 6585

        #18
        Re: Gore's Speech Yesterday

        Originally posted by superdave
        I've heard reporters ask the same question and the Bush Admin.supporter response is that FISA is NOT a rubber stamp court and going through the FISA process can be complicated and hinder investigations due to the process of obtaining the warrant.
        I'm calling bullshit. Perhaps Bush's definition of "after" differs from mine, but I have a hard time understanding how anything that happens after an investigation is conducted can impede that investigation. Under FISA, worst case scenario, the warrant application is denied and the evidence is excluded in a criminal proceeding. From the standpoint of fighting terrorism, however, who really cares if the evidence is admissible or not? Hopefully, if they found anything important out, they would already be acting on it by the time a warrant application was submitted anyway...

        Sounds to me like either:
        (1) Bush wants to conduct surveillance on people, but is concerned that he wouldn't be able to get a warrant if he asked for it, or
        (2) Bush doesn't want to have to screw with the paperwork.

        If it's option 1, I have to wonder who it is he plans on spying on. Is there a judge in the country that would deny a warrant to tap the phone of a suspected terrorist?

        If it's option 2, it is demonstrative of the incredible laziness that had characterized Bush's presidency. Should we dispense with the 4th Amendment and 200+ years of history because Bush doesn't want to be bothered to have one of a fleet of government attorneys "fill in the blanks" in a form warrant application and take it to the judge? Since FISA was enacted, some 18,000 applications have been made for warrants -- are you trying to tell me that the DOJ doesn't already have the paperwork in the can, locked, loaded and ready to go with just a few tweaks here and there?

        Originally posted by superdave
        I'll side with the people trying to stop the terrorists.
        As opposed to the poeple trying to help the terrorists? I get so sick of this absurd rhetoric and the suggestion that questioning anything the administration does is tantamount to treason.

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        • superdave
          Platinum Poster
          • Jun 2004
          • 1366

          #19
          Re: Gore's Speech Yesterday

          Toasty -Let's look at why Bush is ordering wiretapping. Do you think Bush really wants other people besides the suspected terrorists to be wiretapped? Bush wouldn't have enacted a plan that would cause this type of controversy if he didn't think it was necessary and could get results. He's got enough trouble dealing with Iraq and Katrina criticism.

          You admit in option 1 that you don't really know Bush's motives. So, you really don't have an idea why except yell Bullshit. Is it too much to believe that Bush is really trying to stop another terrorist attack? Have you gotten so anti-Bush that you've allowed your better judgment to get the better of you?
          Never interrupt your enemy when he's making a mistake - Napoleon Bonaparte

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          • toasty
            Sir Toastiness
            • Jun 2004
            • 6585

            #20
            Re: Gore's Speech Yesterday

            Originally posted by superdave
            Toasty -Let's look at why Bush is ordering wiretapping. Do you think Bush really wants other people besides the suspected terrorists to be wiretapped?
            I honestly don't know the answer to this question, but the fact that it would be such a cakewalk to get a warrant to wiretap a suspected terrorist does suggest to me that he may have broader intentions. The problem, though, has less to do with who he decides to tap and more to do with the "I don't have to abide by the law" mindset that led him to do this. This happens to be a program you agree with, but what do you do when Bush -- or god forbid a democrat elected at some point in the future -- uses the same belief in the omnipotent power of the executive branch to do something you have a problem with, all in the name of what the president believes is best for the country?

            Originally posted by superdave
            Bush wouldn't have enacted a plan that would cause this type of controversy if he didn't think it was necessary and could get results. He's got enough trouble dealing with Iraq and Katrina criticism.
            You seem to have a problem with the concept of time. First, the meaning of "after" appears to elude you, leading to the indefensible idea that the procedure for obtaining a warrant after conducting a search can somehow impede that search. Now, you suggest that Bush wouldn't enact a controversial plan in the wake of Iraq and Katrina, evidently ignoring the fact that the plan has been in place since September 2001, well before either of those things hit the fan. Indeed, Bush personally asked the folks at the NYT not to run the story over a year ago, well before Katrina and before discontent regarding Iraq hit the pitch it is at now...

            Originally posted by superdave
            So, you really don't have an idea why except yell Bullshit. Is it too much to believe that Bush is really trying to stop another terrorist attack? Have you gotten so anti-Bush that you've allowed your better judgment to get the better of you?
            There is a difference between simply crying foul for the sake of crying foul, and yelling bullshit because something stinks. In this case, it is most certainly the latter.

            In fairness, however, I am indeed extremely anti-Bush, but that has had no negative impact on my judgment. If anything, watching Bush progress from the straight talkin' simpleton I voted for in 2000 to the monster he is today has encouraged me to read more and investigate more rather than just listening to the words coming out of his mouth, and having the benefit of more information available to me enhances my judgment, I think. Bush's success relies upon people not really paying attention to much beyond the sound bites.

            All of this has led me to the conclusion that I simply cannot take a single word out of Bush's mouth at face value. More than any president before him, Bush has embraced spin to the point that he doesn't have time to govern anymore. I view everything he does as propaganda, so yes, I do look at his actions with a jaundiced eye, and he is always starting out with 2 strikes against him. This is not the knee-jerk reaction of some leftwing nutjob, though -- Bush has worked long and hard to earn my mistrust, and he's got to show me a lot before he'll be back on a level playing field for me.

            Comment

            • neoee
              Platinum Poster
              • Jun 2004
              • 1266

              #21
              Re: Gore's Speech Yesterday

              Originally posted by superdave
              Toasty -Let's look at why Bush is ordering wiretapping. Do you think Bush really wants other people besides the suspected terrorists to be wiretapped? Bush wouldn't have enacted a plan that would cause this type of controversy if he didn't think it was necessary and could get results. He's got enough trouble dealing with Iraq and Katrina criticism.

              You admit in option 1 that you don't really know Bush's motives. So, you really don't have an idea why except yell Bullshit. Is it too much to believe that Bush is really trying to stop another terrorist attack? Have you gotten so anti-Bush that you've allowed your better judgment to get the better of you?
              Let's be realistic here. I don't know if the wiretaps were on domestic-> international calls or domestic-> domestic calls. You don't either! And thats the whole freaking point. No one except our secretive government will ever know because Bush bypassed FISA.

              You expect us to have blind loyalty for this President. The only evidence regarding the wiretapping you have is the word of this administration. You believe in him, I don't. What we need here is an unbiased third party to determine if the wiretaps are legal or not. I wish there were such a party.... oh wait! Almost forgot we had the rubberstamping FISA, yet we didn't even bother with them- even though we can seek approval 72 hours AFTER doing the wiretap. And if you don't think they are rubberstampers consider the statistics; they have only denied FOUR wiretap requests in their entire history.

              I found this comment somewhere and am blatently stealing it because it sums things up pretty well:

              Seriously, why is it that so many conservatives don't trust that stupid, evil, wasteful government to run a social program (just give me my taxes back!), but trust them completely and lovingly to tap your phone or imprison you without trial?

              Why are so many patriots so happy to violate the constitution? You can't burn a flag, but you can listen on my phone calls without due process? Why is everyone a constitutional scholar when it comes to guns or free speech, but starts whistling and looking uncomfortable when it's comes to due process?

              Is the world some delicate and beautiful flower that will be crushed by our founding father's foolish "bill of rights?" Are times all that different?

              Has everyone forgotten why we have these laws? We saw the consequences of not having them not that long ago. Most people who saw the civil rights movement and Watergate are still alive today. Collective amnesia?

              What kind of patriot are you, if want the ten commandments in a courthouse, but not the constitution?

              How do you not call yourself a hypocrite, when you impeach a man for lying about his affair, but not a man who admits to violate his oath of office, and the law of the land, and declares he will keep right on doing it?

              FISA hardly ever said no. There's only one reason why they would want to hide their spying from FISA... "terrorists" now include their political enemies.
              "They who would give up an essential liberty for temporary security, deserve neither liberty or security." -Benjamin Franklin

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              • superdave
                Platinum Poster
                • Jun 2004
                • 1366

                #22
                Re: Gore's Speech Yesterday

                You're right -- I would be going crazy and screaming civil rights abuses if a Democratic President was doing what Bush is doing.
                Never interrupt your enemy when he's making a mistake - Napoleon Bonaparte

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                • geoffgulley
                  Platinum Poster
                  • Apr 2005
                  • 2002

                  #23
                  Re: Gore's Speech Yesterday

                  Thanks Toasty.... you continually voice my sentiments in an articulate and rational way...
                  "only dead fish swim with the stream..." Malcolm Muggeridge





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