General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsLast attempt: Defending the NSA's actions REQUIRES that you believe Bush did everything he could,
with the information he had at his disposal, to stop 9/11. He couldn't have stopped it without The Department of Homeland Security, The Patriot Act, or any of the things that Snowden exposed. It requires you to believe that he was right to ignore the intelligence provided at the time by our own intelligence services and foreign intelligence services.
In short, any defense of the NSA's (and, by extension, President Obama's) tactics today is a defense of George W. Bush. Period.
Explain why I'm wrong.
jbond56
(403 posts)I think if shrub was told of every possible way it could have been stopped he still would have failed. No matter how hard he tried.
Pale Blue Dot
(16,831 posts)Alot of things have changed and we have lost alot of ground. So Its hard to imagine things would have played out the same way, but the end result may not have been different.
Pale Blue Dot
(16,831 posts)given intelligence briefings that say "Bin Laden determined to strike in the US" and saying he intended to use airplanes, could not have put a plan in place that would have stopped him? You obviously think little of President Obama.
JaneyVee
(19,877 posts)kentuck
(111,106 posts)That George W was the village idiot. He failed at everything he tried until he found a scheme to make some money from a baseball team. Remember the oil company he started? I forget the name of it off the top of my head? But I think it was someone in the Bin Laden family, perhaps an uncle of Usama bin Laden, that was one of the main investors in George's oil venture. Basically, he was an arrogant asshole. Nobody could tell him anything. He was the "decider". So, presidentin' is hard. We may never recover.
Mnemosyne
(21,363 posts)kentuck
(111,106 posts)Mnemosyne
(21,363 posts)baldguy
(36,649 posts)For exposing secrets.
Pale Blue Dot
(16,831 posts)Given the available intelligence briefings? Given the same intelligence, would Obama have been able to stop it? I'll bet you'll deflect rather than answer, which will be telling.
baldguy
(36,649 posts)Pale Blue Dot
(16,831 posts)baldguy
(36,649 posts)Pale Blue Dot
(16,831 posts)If it's so easy to dismantle, please dismantle my OP WITHOUT changing the subject to a Strawman. Good luck!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strawman
baldguy
(36,649 posts)Get over the fact that you can't defend it.
Pale Blue Dot
(16,831 posts)I just want to be clear on this, because it appears that you are defending Bush. I would hate for it to appear that way.
baldguy
(36,649 posts)You're not as good at this as Ray Bolger.
*sigh* If you only had a brain.
sabrina 1
(62,325 posts)to explain the difference?
Opposing these leaks means siding with Cheney, Bush, Peter King, Sarah Palin, Ari Fleischer, Boehner, and in fact every Bush War Criminal who was never prosecuted, and every Republican who supported these Bush policies.
How you know you're on the right track? By who is on your side.
I'm proud to be once again, as always, on the opposite side to Cheney, who hates these leaks, King, Fleishcher Boehner, Palin et al. If I ever thought that gang of corrupt morons agreed with me, as they agree with you, I would seriously begin to question my opinions.
baldguy
(36,649 posts)HardTimes99
(2,049 posts)baldguy
(36,649 posts)Having the metadata about phone calls and emails is not the same as the content & the identity of the sender and receiver.
Snowden, as the employee of a private contractor, did not have the ability not the authority to tap anyone's phone. He was not able to listen in on the President's phone calls.
The programs Snowden exposed are not unconstitutional or illegal.
These are Snowden's central allegations. None of them are true. The President has repeatedly said that they are not true. Members of the House & Senate Intelligence Committees have repeatedly said that they are not true. Most knowledgeable legal experts are saying that they are not true.
The text of the warrant Snowden provided proves that they are not true. It covers only anonymous metadata, which isn't linked to any particular individual without a further warrant.
Cali_Democrat
(30,439 posts)HardTimes99
(2,049 posts)the assertions of authorities. many of whom like Dianne Feinstein have skin in the game in the form of massive financial investments in the infrastructure of the National Security State.
Furthermore, I think you and I define 'allegation' differently. This allows you to create a strawman of supposed Snowden allegations that you can then proceed to knock over as somehow 'proven false'. Snowden alleged a technical capability, not an operational actuality. At least based on what I read. If the technical capability Snowden alleged became or becomes an operational actuality, it would damned well be both illegal and unconstitutional.
Tell me again how a proven liar who can't hold a job is more trustworthy than a sitting Democratic President of the United States.
sabrina 1
(62,325 posts)revealed and what he revealed only confirms what was revealed by all the other Whistle Blowers of the past decade.
I'll give you the benefit of the doubt and assume you are kidding.
baldguy
(36,649 posts)jeff47
(26,549 posts)'Cause he did leak that Verizon warrant.....was that a lie?
sabrina 1
(62,325 posts)The FISA court cannot issue warrants for domestic intelligence!! So, how did they get that warrant??? Got any ideas?
This is why we need Congressional hearings, as Don Wyden among other Democrats, have been saying for a long time now.
Do you get it now?? FISA = FOREIGN Intel. It is ILLEGAL to spy on the American people, with or without a warrant.
What probable cause, a Constitutional Requirement for ANY warrant, did the NSA present to the Fisa Court to do something as illegal as spying on the American people?? Did they LIE to the FISA Court?
The Warrant IS the problem!
jeff47
(26,549 posts)Nope.
First, if FBI gets a wiretap warrant, then they are spying on American people. Search warrants also cause law enforcement to spy on American people.
Additionally, Title 50 (which created the intelligence agencies) does not forbid the intelligence agencies from helping title 7 (law enforcement) agencies. So far, all that's been leaked is the NSA is storing the data. Nothing has been leaked about how the data is or has been used, so we don't know if it's being used by title 7 or title 50 entities.
Finally, the metadata belongs to the phone companies, not the American people. So do you now want to extend full Constitutional rights to corporations?
Forget it! It's just too sad to read this stuff on DU.
For those who understand this democracy, just so you don't think I agree with the above comment.
SPYING ON THE AMERICAN PEOPLE IS ILLEGAL! No law 'fixed' that. The FISA 'fix' was done to protect Bush who had broken the law. Congress CHANGED the law to legalize his illegal activities.
They did NOT make 'spying on the American legal' as you see in the comment above. They made it not necessary to get a warrant until AFTER the fact.
jeff47
(26,549 posts)That way one isn't in danger of having to think about their positions.
How is an FBI wiretap not spying on an American?
Odd that it passed in 2010 then, instead of 2006 when Bush's program came to light and he still had a Republican majority in both houses. Almost like that wasn't the entire reason for the 2010 law.....
Life Long Dem
(8,582 posts)When they are still stuck on hyperbole talk.
Autumn
(45,120 posts)In the long run I don't think anyone is going to change anyone's mind. If you were against it when Bush was doing it, you're probably going to be against it now.
Pale Blue Dot
(16,831 posts)Given the available intelligence, could a competent President have stopped 9/11? I say the answer is an overwhelming "yes".
Autumn
(45,120 posts)The information was there and it was ignored.
Phlem
(6,323 posts)"Defending the NSA's actions REQUIRES that you believe Bush did everything he could" LOL
"yeh see heh, I'm the decider ya see? I needs to see everything so I can decides!
person: "But mister president, you do want to end this unlawful gathering of information don't you?"
Yer FIRED, I've decided, heh.... punk."
-p
I'm agreeing with you.
-p
jberryhill
(62,444 posts)Do you recognize that chapter title?
gcomeau
(5,764 posts)Either the NSA gas to dara collection or no other intelligence information exists in the entire world. Those are the options you just asserted existed.
You need it to be *explained* why you're wrong????
Would you like us to clarify the problem with "if you say we need jet planes then you have to believe that without them we're incapable of physical motion" while we're at it???
Pale Blue Dot
(16,831 posts)This is in little dispute, expect on Free Republic. What are you saying? That Bush was great?
gcomeau
(5,764 posts)That is completely irrelevant to the conclusion you then tried to tie it to.
jeff47
(26,549 posts)Phone companies are going to collect the data no matter what. They have to in order to send you a phone bill. And the data belongs to the phone companies, per a 1979 SCOTUS ruling.
During the W administration, the phone companies gleefully handed it over to the executive branch without any oversight, warrants, or probable cause.
I don't want that. And I have no reason to believe the phone companies would not do so again.
The system set up by the 2010 law requires oversight from both the judicial and legislative branch. It requires warrants. It's much better than the system you inherently propose: Going back to the 2006 scandal. Because if there's no system in place, then there's nothing preventing returning to the abuses from that era.
Hey look! Neither 9/11 or evil terrorists of doom even came up in my explanation!
Pale Blue Dot
(16,831 posts)There was not a court, President, or American who would have denied a warrant for all communications coming in and out of Bin Laden's headquarters. That was how they got the information necessary to predict 9/11. Nothing new was needed... just a President who was willing to listen to the competent intelligence he was presented with.
Your response? Please be specific, lest it look like you're supporting President Bush.
jeff47
(26,549 posts)That's why I added the tag line on the end. And it's why you're desperately returning to 9/11 and terrorism - you don't have to bother thinking if you do that.
The information is very valuable in investigating many crimes. For example, it could be quite helpful in an insider trading investigation. Thus I think it's good to save the metadata.
But I do not trust the phone companies to prevent government access to the data. Because they utterly failed to do so in the recent past, and have zero incentives to protect the data in the future. Enter the system under the 2010 law that creates safeguards to protect the metadata.
If I could wave a magic wand to set up a system, I'd probably have an entity that reports to Congress actually store the data. They're the only branch of government not directly involved in investigating crimes, so they would have the least incentive to sneak around the process. Plus, Congresspeople on both sides of the aisle have demonstrated they shirk their oversight responsibilities under the current system, so moving down to "Librarian of Congress" level is more likely to produce effective safeguards.
Pale Blue Dot
(16,831 posts)And if you can't see why, that's f***ing scarier.
jeff47
(26,549 posts)It's far better than actually having a discussion. You might have to actually consider an issue if you discussed it.
Much better to blithely repeat what others say, and then shout "You're wrong!!" to anyone who doesn't agree.
Response to Pale Blue Dot (Original post)
Herlong This message was self-deleted by its author.