2016 Postmortem
Related: About this forumMcCain: Boston bombings proved Rand Paul wrong
Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) suggested Sunday that fellow Republican Sen. Rand Paul (Ky.) hurt his credibility on fighting terrorism.
Asked by CNNs Candy Crowley about Pauls objection to the Obama administrations surveillance programs, which McCain supports, McCain said Paul got it wrong in the runup to the Boston Marathon bombings.
Just prior to the Boston bombing, he said the battlefield was no longer in America, McCain said on CNNs State of the Union. Hes the only one that voted that Iran must not be
contained in the pursuit of nuclear weapons. I disagree.
McCain and Paul have found themselves on opposite sides of many foreign policy and terrorism-related issues. After Pauls 13-hour filibuster of President Obamas drone program earlier this year, McCain labeled Paul and fellow conservatives including Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) wacko birds.
full: http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/post-politics/wp/2013/06/09/mccain-boston-bombings-proved-rand-paul-wrong/
Major Hogwash
(17,656 posts)No kidding, and now Cruz is trying to act like he never thought of running for President!!
Both of those prima donnas don't stand a chance to run for higher office under the harsh glaring sunlight.
90-percent
(6,829 posts)Argument A - Our government takes away a few more layers of our Constitutional Rights and it still didn't prevent more terrorism - witness the Boston bombings. SO WHAT GOOD IS THIS "TOTAL INFORMATION AWARENESS" crap anyway?
Argument B - The Boston Bombing prove we don't yet have enough surveillance and the government should be allowed into all aspects of our privacy without question.
It just occurred to me that Argument B has been in force since 9-11. Which means we all need to fore-go even more basic rights if we're going to get serious about fighting terrorism.
-90% Jimmy
davidpdx
(22,000 posts)so they weren't exactly a lone wolf, but loan wolves. It is possible they didn't communicate about their plan in anyway that could have been picked up. Sure the government had a flag on the older brother, but no proof. If the government had picked him up with no proof people would be screaming. In this instance, there was no way to know what the two brothers were doing. Then when the government used crowd sourcing to find out who they were people flipped out (even though a large number of the pictures came from citizens who voluntary contributed the photos to help find them).
Is there a perfect balance? Probably not.
davidpdx
(22,000 posts)with the caption: "I'm going to eat you alive Rand Paul"