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Cringely on Domestic Eavesdropping 584

krygny writes "In this week's The Pulpit, Robert X. Cringely presents some interesting factoids he uncovered in his research into the NSA's domestic surveillance. He makes no judgements but offers some interesting stuff you might not have already known." From the article: "Intercepting communications for purposes of maintaining national security is nothing new. From before Pearl Harbor through 1945, EVERY trans-Atlantic phone call, cable and indeed letter was intercepted in Bermuda by the Coordinator of Information (COI) in the White House and later by the Office of Strategic Services (OSS). Sir William Stephenson revealed this in his autobiography, A Man Called Intrepid. They literally tapped the undersea cables and shipped all post to Europe through Bermuda, where every single call was monitored, every cable printed out, and every letter opened. FDR and Churchill needed intelligence and they took the steps they needed to get it."
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Cringely on Domestic Eavesdropping

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday January 21, 2006 @02:50AM (#14525058)
    This is exactly why we have a little law called FISA. And FISA is why the domestic spying program is a problem, because under FISA the domestic spying program is illegal. FDR wasn't really subject to FISA because FISA was passed in 1978.
    • This is exactly why we have a little law called FISA. And FISA is why the domestic spying program is a problem, because under FISA the domestic spying program is illegal. FDR wasn't really subject to FISA because FISA was passed in 1978.

      But the constitution trumps FISA. FISA can't take powers away from the president that he is granted under the constitution.

      And the "domestic spying" HAS caught at least one guy. Iyman Faris's plan to destroy the Brooklyn Bridge was discovered through monitoring his phone cal
      • by TheNoxx ( 412624 ) on Saturday January 21, 2006 @03:03AM (#14525086) Homepage Journal
        Pardon my ignorance, but where, precisely, does the Constitution give the President the authority to override the Bill of Rights?
        • by TubeSteak ( 669689 ) on Saturday January 21, 2006 @03:41AM (#14525206) Journal
          Secret Amendment.

          And no, Congress and the Senate don't have clearance to read it.

          But it's there, honest.
          • You may laugh, but consider this; The Netherlands, the pesky little country I'm from actually has secret treaties with the US. These supercede our own constitution. They're the reason we let the US use our airspace and their military bases on our soil in preparation of the current war on Iraq, even though our Parliament did NOT approve. Nor did they get to read said secret treaties with the US.

            Now consider this; if our Parliament isn't aware of their content.. Who is? They didn't get to look it up on www.lo
            • Cite? (Score:5, Insightful)

              by antientropic ( 447787 ) on Saturday January 21, 2006 @10:59AM (#14526401)

              You may laugh, but consider this; The Netherlands, the pesky little country I'm from actually has secret treaties with the US. These supercede our own constitution.

              Do you have any citation for that? I'm Dutch and I've never heard of anything like this. In any case it sounds like it would be quite unconstitutional [unibe.ch]:

              Article 91
              (1) The Kingdom shall not be bound by treaties, nor shall such treaties be denounced without the prior approval of the Parliament. The cases in which approval is not required shall be specified by Act of Parliament.
              (...)
              (3) Any provisions of a treaty that conflict with the Constitution or which lead to conflicts with it may be approved by the Chambers of the Parliament only if at least two-thirds of the votes cast are in favor. (...)

              Please don't perpetuate urban legends without providing proof.

        • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

          by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Saturday January 21, 2006 @07:24AM (#14525702)
          Comment removed based on user account deletion
          • by Pike ( 52876 ) on Saturday January 21, 2006 @11:32AM (#14526549) Journal
            Try this [usdoj.gov] on for size.

            Some commentators have read the constitutional text differently. They argue that the vesting of the power to declare war gives Congress the sole authority to decide whether to make war. (6) This view misreads the constitutional text and misunderstands the nature of a declaration of war. Declaring war is not tantamount to making war - indeed, the Constitutional Convention specifically amended the working draft of the Constitution that had given Congress the power to make war. An earlier draft of the Constitution had given to Congress the power to "make" war. When it took up this clause on August 17, 1787, the Convention voted to change the clause from "make" to "declare." 2 The Records of the Federal Convention of 1787, at 318-19 (Max Farrand ed., rev. ed. 1966) (1911). A supporter of the change argued that it would "leav[e] to the Executive the power to repel sudden attacks." Id. at 318. Further, other elements of the Constitution describe "engaging" in war, which demonstrates that the Framers understood making and engaging in war to be broader than simply "declaring" war. See U.S. Const. art. I, 10, cl. 3 ("No State shall, without the Consent of Congress . . . engage in War, unless actually invaded, or in such imminent Danger as will not admit of delay."). A State constitution at the time of the ratification included provisions that prohibited the governor from "making" war without legislative approval, S.C. Const. art. XXVI (1776), reprinted in 6 The Federal and State Constitutions 3247 (Francis Newton Thorpe ed., 1909). (7) If the Framers had wanted to require congressional consent before the initiation of military hostilities, they knew how to write such provisions.

            Finally, the Framing generation well understood that declarations of war were obsolete. Not all forms of hostilities rose to the level of a declared war: during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, Great Britain and colonial America waged numerous conflicts against other states without an official declaration of war. (8) As Alexander Hamilton observed during the ratification, "the ceremony of a formal denunciation of war has of late fallen into disuse." The Federalist No. 25, at 133 (Alexander Hamilton). Instead of serving as an authorization to begin hostilities, a declaration of war was only necessary to "perfect" a conflict under international law. A declaration served to fully transform the international legal relationship between two states from one of peace to one of war. See 1 William Blackstone, Commentaries *249-50. Given this context, it is clear that Congress's power to declare war does not constrain the President's independent and plenary constitutional authority over the use of military force.

            • by ZachPruckowski ( 918562 ) <zachary.pruckowski@gmail.com> on Saturday January 21, 2006 @12:17PM (#14526796)
              Ok, and this logic would apply if Al Qaeda was launching spontaneous border raids from Mexico/Canada. But the "war"s we're in have lasted several years. This is not a case of an executive avoiding red tape in order to protect the country. The War Powers Act pretty much defines a "military action" as different from a war. If the President wanted a "war", I bet he could easily get one from Congress. But he hasn't declared that the "War on Terror" is as critical as the War on Fascism (WWII), or the War Between the States. Personally, I feel like the President can't have it both ways. He says "Everyone go about your normal lives", then proceeds to use emergency powers designed for times of extreme danger to America. Which is it?
        • by SEWilco ( 27983 ) on Saturday January 21, 2006 @11:22AM (#14526497) Journal
          Pardon my ignorance, but where, precisely, does the Constitution give the President the authority to override the Bill of Rights?

          The Bill of Rights applies to activities within the USA, it does not apply to your international phone calls. Your home in the USA is protected by U.S. laws, but your home in France is not. Your international phone calls may be intercepted by the NSA, while your phone call to the corner store may not be...unless the phone company routes it through Canada or a satellite.

          • The Bill of Rights restricts the actions "the government" may take against "the people". That means the US government may not act against anyone in ways that violate the constition anywhere... regardless of whether or not they are on US soil.
      • by HangingChad ( 677530 ) on Saturday January 21, 2006 @08:52AM (#14525946) Homepage
        And the "domestic spying" HAS caught at least one guy. Iyman Faris's plan to destroy the Brooklyn Bridge was discovered through monitoring his phone calls.

        This is the guy who was going to cut down the Brooklyn Bridge with a cutting torch. We could have let him try it and he'd still be out there trying to cut through those cables. His plan was so stupid it could qualify as material on the 3 Stooges.

        And this is your big "evidence" that domestic spying thwarts terrorism? I think people like you are the problem as much as the Bush administration. You'd sell out liberty and freedom just to preserve a false sense of security for your fat, dumpy Lay-Z-Boy sitting, SUV driving ass. You're a gutless, spineless, disgusting example of what America has become.

      • by frost22 ( 115958 ) on Saturday January 21, 2006 @10:04AM (#14526186) Homepage
        FISA can't take powers away from the president that he is granted under the constitution.
        This is basically a renewed version of the theory of "Divine Grace". Absolute Monarchs in the 16th and 17th century argued that God had made them rulers by His Divine Grace, and therfore considered their power to be absolute and without limits. They were above all laws. Enlightenment and civil revolution finally did away with this nonsense.

        Now you just substitute "divine grace" by "the founding fathers"

        It is pretty embarassing that a sizeable part of the population in an enlightened country like the US whith a long democratic tradition suddenly adheres to such theories. If you want to know where such lunacy can end, look uzp terms like "Ermächtigungsgesetz"....
      • "But the constitution trumps FISA. FISA can't take powers away from the president that he is granted under the constitution."

        Probably true. But the President doesn't have the authority to for warrantless searches of US citizens. I believe the SCTOUS said something to that effect. Of course, that doesn't mean they can't ignore that ruling.

        "And the "domestic spying" HAS caught at least one guy. Iyman Faris's plan to destroy the Brooklyn Bridge was discovered through monitoring his phone calls."

        Well, I don't
    • by ilyaaohell ( 866922 ) on Saturday January 21, 2006 @03:01AM (#14525082)
      I say we go a step further. We should support President McKinley, grow handlebar mustaches, and crack the heads of the filthy Irish!
    • But of course FDR never did anything illegal or unconstitutional as president.
    • It's a dupe. Zonk already posted about OSS at 5:24.

      +2 Stupid.
    • Nobody does any domestic spying. The NSA are in england working with the english spooks that actually spy on us. English spooks work with NSA spying on English subjects (a subject is like a citizen but without guns).

      That has been going on sense Truman. Kennedy did it, Clinton did it, so did Nixon and Reagan.

    • by lordholm ( 649770 ) on Saturday January 21, 2006 @03:45AM (#14525215) Homepage
      This is intresting, as in Sweden, the goverment is investigating whether to allow for international calls and data transmission in wires to be intercepted. The FRA (Swedish version of the NSA), already intercept radio transmissions, and they want more.

      And as usual, international is defined as not-in-sweden, so this includes intra-european traffic as well, which is really way over the line. Not that I am surprised, Sweden have a facshist as minister of justice, who just recently together with his British collegue, pushed through a law in Europe, forcing ISPs, mail-servers, mobile phone companies &.c to log data on their customers communications (not the contents, but bad enough) for TWO years.

      While it might be reasonable for European police to be given access to existing records after a court order, this new law is unprecedented in that it regulates what data that is to be stored, which turns out to be a lot more information than was actually stored by telephone and internet companies by default.

      This is disgusting and I want none of it.

      PS! To any Swede reading this, dispose Bodström in the autum elections, all other questions are secondary! DS!
  • by sriehl ( 758915 ) on Saturday January 21, 2006 @02:55AM (#14525070) Homepage
    This still doesn't mean that it is right for communications within the US to be monitored. Just because one thing has been done a long time, does not make it right. Look at slavery for example.
  • Okay... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by TheNoxx ( 412624 ) on Saturday January 21, 2006 @02:57AM (#14525072) Homepage Journal
    Well, guess what, murder, genocide, and rape are nothing new either... that doesn't make them any less reprehensible.

    McCarthy did the same thing with communism as Bush is doing with terrorism. I still can't believe Bush hasn't even *apolagized* for breaking our fundamental American rights. Just because doing so is unoriginal has no bearing on the fact of it being completely unethical conduct and grounds for legal action against his administration.

    Oh well. I suppose we had a good enough run with freedom and personal liberty (something like... 30 or 40 years out of the thousands of years humans have been around?). Time for another Dark Ages. Hooray.
    • Re:Okay... (Score:3, Funny)

      by TopSpin ( 753 ) *
      I still can't believe Bush hasn't even *apolagized* (sic) for breaking our fundamental American rights

      It has been six years and people still hold out hope Bush can be harangued into apologies.

      Yay for persistence.

    • Re:Okay... (Score:3, Informative)

      by NecroPuppy ( 222648 )
      The difference is, McCarthy was right.

      Check out the Verona Project records if you don't believe me. Many of the people he questioned or wanted to question actually were Soviet agents.
      • Re:Okay... (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Scudsucker ( 17617 )
        The difference is, McCarthy was right. Check out the Verona Project records if you don't believe me. Many of the people he questioned or wanted to question actually were Soviet agents.

        To go straight to Godwin's Law, that's like saying Hitler was right because some of the Jews that were killed actually were bad people. Utter nonsense.
    • Re:Okay... (Score:3, Insightful)

      by symbolic ( 11752 )
      I still can't believe Bush hasn't even *apolagized* for breaking our fundamental American rights.

      He never will, either. He thinks he has the authority to do what he did. He somehow believes that Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces (which is worrisome enough by itself) somehow equates to Commander in Chief of the United States, and therefore, puts him above the law. Nixon and others have suffered from similar delusional thinking.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday January 21, 2006 @03:01AM (#14525084)
    > From before Pearl Harbor

    Soooo... how'd that work out?
    • by Rosco P. Coltrane ( 209368 ) on Saturday January 21, 2006 @03:07AM (#14525102)
      You know, they *might* just have missed the call saying "Banzai! we're attacking!" as the cables that were tapped were under the Atlantic, and the Japanese probably didn't route their phone calls through them to avoid long-distance charges.
      • You know, they *might* just have missed the call saying "Banzai! we're attacking!"

        Actually the message was not missed - the US knew by the 4th of December that war with Japan was only a few days away - and orders were sent out for the destruction of decryption gear in the Philipines and Guam. What wasn't known was the exact time and place for the attacks.

        There's a slight issue with timing here - from TFA, the intercepts begain before Pearl Harbor, but the US didn't declare war on Germany until December

    • the evidence shows that Pearl Harbour was not a surprise, it was allowed to happen so US citizens would get pissed off and want to join the war. the most important ships were moved out of the harbour though.
    • by jd ( 1658 ) <imipakNO@SPAMyahoo.com> on Saturday January 21, 2006 @03:46AM (#14525220) Homepage Journal
      There are plenty of people who argue that Churchill (at least) and possibly FDR knew perfectly well about the impending attack and did nothing, in order to draw America into the war. If you believe this theory, then this is a great method to manipulate others by selectively handing out information for political gain.


      There are plenty who argue that neither knew about the attack, which would mean that those planning such things are probably smart enough to be discrete about it, which would mean that such surveillance is utterly worthless.


      There are claims that Churchill knew about the attack, because older Japanese diplomatic codes had already been broken and enough could be extracted from messages to know the generalities even if not the specifics. (The newer diplomatic codes used were apparently derived from the ones that had been broken, to the point where partial decryption was possible.) If that is the case, then basic signals intelligence between key figures would seem to be more valuable than general monitoring.


      Regardless of which of the popular theories you subscribe to, there is one common aspect - the kind of spying being practiced against American citizens is useless, whether or not other forms of signal intelligence has any value.


      (Actually, existing sigint practices in general seem pretty crappy. We've had numerous false alarms, where the threat level has been raised but no evidence of any attack ha ever emerged. On the other hand, actual attacks in very recent times - such as those in London - were missed entirely.)


      It does nothing to raise confidence levels when you realize that several top US Government officials have been arrested on spying charges in the US... ENTIRELY through a mix of blind luck, observation and routine detective footwork. If the US monitoring program can't even monitor national secrets and foreign agents, then it's not much use as a monitoring service.


      Well, either that or it's not being used to monitor "threats" of that kind at all, which raises the question of what it IS monitoring. Nixon's crusade against the Democrats had far more to do with keeping himself in absolute power than with keeping the country safe, and Hoover was notorious for finding out the dirty secrets of anyone who could threaten his personal powerbase. Not to be cynical (reader: "you expect me to believe that?") but a comparison of results versus approach would seem to indicate that this program isn't as much for the benefit of national security as we're being told.

  • by Mrs. Grundy ( 680212 ) on Saturday January 21, 2006 @03:03AM (#14525089) Homepage
    This controversy gets a little old as people argue the various ethical merits of government wiretaps. The issue is not whether eavesdropping on communications is necessary, right, or wrong, but whether we want to live in a country where the executive charged with running it is not bound by the law. I'm sure the lawyers in the DOJ will put forth some very creative arguments, but I think it is clear to most people that this breaks both the letter and the spirit of the law. As this plays out, we will be well served to remember that congress writes the laws and the executive branch enforces them. When the president and his staff decide they need not adhere to the laws congress has authored, it is time to consider the meaning of 'high Crimes or Misdemeanors."
    • by Quirk ( 36086 )
      As a Canadian I'm reminded of reading that, IIRC, the 7th President... "President Andrew Jackson is supposed to have said of A Supreme court ruling he opposed: "Well, John Marshall has made his decision, now let him enforce it."

      Again IIRC, the Supreme Court backed down. Certainly the power of the Supreme Court has increased substantially since Jackson's remark. I doubt any president would repeat the remark.

      There may well be a streak in the American character that sees in the presidency something akin to th

    • Damn straight.

      This is about Principle.

      It drives me crazy when I see "Well, if you don't have anything to hide, you've got nothing to worry about."

      Thats not the point

      The point is that this should only happen if laws are amended and elected Representatives of the People take part in the process.

      No legal consultations, opinions, or equivocations can change the fact that some part of the process broke down & allowed the Executive Office to act unchecked.

      That's just not how America the Beautiful [fuzzylu.com] is supposed
  • by Rosco P. Coltrane ( 209368 ) on Saturday January 21, 2006 @03:04AM (#14525092)
    They literally tapped the undersea cables and shipped all post to Europe through Bermuda, where every single call was monitored, every cable printed out, and every letter opened.

    Letters traveling through undersea cables? clever that...
  • Agree with me that Clinton was as bad a person for doing this as Bush is, and you'll show everyone that at least you're consistent.
  • by Council ( 514577 ) <rmunroe AT gmail DOT com> on Saturday January 21, 2006 @03:15AM (#14525128) Homepage
    Robert X. Cringely presents some interesting factoids he uncovered

    I couldn't help but laugh when I learned, earlier today, that the word "factoid" technically refers to an untrue piece of information that is accepted as true due to repetition in the media.

    In a profound stroke of irony, the incorrect definition of 'factoid' (a small piece of information) has become the prevailing one through repetition in the media.
    • The more modern use it that of a small interesting fact [bartleby.com]:

      Factoid has since developed a second meaning, that of a brief, somewhat interesting fact, that might better have been called a factette.

      I have not seen a use in recent memory of facts that were not true - though indeed very trivial facts. Modern use tends more towards the "it's true, but really doens't matter much to most people".
  • Apathy (Score:3, Insightful)

    by eikonos ( 779343 ) on Saturday January 21, 2006 @03:20AM (#14525141) Homepage Journal
    It's obvious that what the Bush administration did is against the law, so why are so many people are too apathetic to do anything about it?
    • beause he's only violating the Constitution and the Declaration of Human Rights.

      if he started coveting his neighbour's ass you better believe he'd get smacked down.
    • Many Americans support the President. Many are afraid. Many afraid people make it possible for the government to greatly increase its power. Many people want this. If the government is breaking laws, it is because there is a war on! Serious new measures must be taken! This is what makes me afraid.
  • by Animats ( 122034 ) on Saturday January 21, 2006 @03:20AM (#14525143) Homepage
    The US opened, and censored, international mail during WWII. This was no secret. The US was very open about it; letters were resealed with the marking"Opened By Censor." [stamps-auctions.com]
    • Letters are sealed so its hard to pretend it wasn't opened en route.
      No so with phone calls.
      Maybe they should briefly interrupt your call with a message:

      "the department of arbitrary surveillance is recording this call - thank you citizen"

      Would actually be better than today.

    • Look this still happens today from Iraq..... More specifically from GIs in Iraq to anywhere.... In fact, you can put in whatever war zone your want in the above comment and it is true. NOTE This is a military issue. As a member of the Military, you are missing some rights that you would have as a Civilian. (Nature of the military.)
  • The Unsinkable Aircraft Carrier: American Military Power in Britain

    Duncan Cambell, Paladin 1986 - ISBN 0586086269
  • by Clockwurk ( 577966 ) * on Saturday January 21, 2006 @03:28AM (#14525166) Homepage
    When there is a congressional election. If democrats can take back the house, they could possibly impeach the president; no Republican controlled house would ever betray their parties president (especially after he was re(s)elected). The angle that I don't think has been stressed enough is how Bush acted. If he really thought that having to go through a court that has approved 18,742 wiretap warrants and denied 5 was such an unconstitutional restraint of his power, he should have spoken up when he started doing it. Bush is asking for huge increases in executive power during a war he started under false premises.

    According to a recent Zogby poll, 52% of Americans approve of impeaching Bush if he wiretapped an American citizen without a judges approval.

    This wiretapping scandal can only get bigger as more and more layers get exposed. It appears Bush may have been wiretapping Americans before 9/11. [gwu.edu]

    • Correct me if i am wrong, but is it not 2006?
    • by mattwarden ( 699984 ) on Saturday January 21, 2006 @05:34AM (#14525489)

      This wiretapping scandal can only get bigger as more and more layers get exposed.

      If it doesn't happen fast, it could very well die. The American Public gets tired of the same story after it's discussed 6 or 7 times. Then the Super Bowl comes around. Then... OOO!!! SHINY~!!! etc. etc.

      But, as the election nears, hopefully the Democrats will grow some you-know-whats and bring the subject to the foreground again.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday January 21, 2006 @03:29AM (#14525171)
    Because the people you're eavesdropping on can set up arbitrarily complex networks of people and messages across different communication networks. The following could be a message to my terrorist buddies: fiesufsdkfjdsjhfdsjhfkjdfsdhjk43243. Woohoo. Now, even if you KNOW I'm a terrorist, you have to check up on EVERYONE who accessed those bytes, and you have to correlate all of their communications to all others who might relay the message offline to still others, who might reconstitute it and retransmit it again, etc., ad infinitum.

    Good luck figuring all that out, before something blows up when you least expected it.

  • I'm sure if the domestic eavesdropping were a narrowly targeted program, the Bush administration would have gotten warrants from the secret courts and there would be no issue. However, the NSA is likely monitoring a huge range of communications and then mining the data for potential "hits" using voice analysis or some other automated technique. Warrants to monitor specific lines or people don't really make sense unless the "hits" pan out. The 1978 FISA law is out of date given present day monitoring capa
  • Bad news kids... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday January 21, 2006 @03:36AM (#14525192)
    The country you grew up hearing about in school... dead if it ever existed.

    The principles it was founded on... undermined.

    The word from all forms of media, public and private... propoganda.

    The truth... Too crazy to be believed.

    The reality... It's always 1984.
  • FISA and it's limits (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday January 21, 2006 @03:43AM (#14525210)
    FISA is not the be-all and end-all of Surveillaince law, any more than Jim Crow, the law of the land, was consistent with the Constitution. Yes up to and including Plessy vs. Ferguson and a Supreme Court decision affirming the legality of segregation.

    FISA was written in 1978, before throw-away cell phones and the idea that terrorism would ever be a threat to Americans. We are at war with a stateless enemy that exists in every nation of the globe and is sworn to our destruction.

    Given that, does GWB have the authority under the Consititution to establish basically a giant version of "Snort" on US telco switches and filter out comms to/from Al Qaeda?

    My guess is probably. The Constititution and FISA are both notably silent on data mining on telco traffic to/from foreign nations. Though it's worth noting that Bill Clinton and Al Gore asserted JUST such an authority with Echelon back in the 1990s (using the Canadians and Brits to surveill us while we surveilled them and the Aussies and everyone shared). Not to mention Al Gore's defense of the Clipper Chip and Carnivore.

    There likely needs to be better oversight (sure any technology can be abused) but adhering to FISA rigidly is like not trusting this new-fangled fingerprint business, or DNA testing. As it is this tech gives us LOTS of leads we'd otherwise never get. Your computer can be used to invade people's privacy, I don't see Slashdot readers deciding to abjure technology and go live in a mud hut somewhere.

    Point being that with changes in technology and society the understanding of the Constitution changes. We don't live in the 1890's and don't have LEGAL and Supreme Court approved Segregation. I assume that the Supremes will hold that the President DOES have the authority to check out who's in contact with Al Qaeda without a FISA warrant, and like property qualifications for officeholding and voting FISA itself will go away.
  • by carcosa30 ( 235579 ) on Saturday January 21, 2006 @03:51AM (#14525227)
    Bush sorely needs intelligence too.

  • So there are all these instances where leaders we hold in great esteem arranged pervasive wiretaps, but what was the actual value of those taps? What information did the yield that was really that worthwhile?

    And how does that valuation fit into the current "legal" system involving FISA as opposed to the illegal system that skips FISA?

    This article is a good history lesson, but it doesn't succeed in supporting unchecked spying? Checks and balances are the foundation of our society, and to destroy them is un
  • These these kind of curtailments of liberties during wartime have a long history in America. Lincoln suspended habeas corpus, FDR not only spied domestically but put an entire ethnic group in "jail" clearly violating equal protection(which is still on the books today as precedent). Truman and LBJ both certainly pressed the limits of presidential power during their wars.

    The trend on this list is of (great) American liberals. Bush does not fit this mold imo, from various perspectives. Also importantly, the
    • Re:Unitary Executive (Score:5, Interesting)

      by kevinbr ( 689680 ) on Saturday January 21, 2006 @08:10AM (#14525826)
      But has war been declared? We declare wars in the press: War on Terror, War on Drugs.....etc. But these are just labels. The reality is a REAL war the ENTIRE nation is at immediate risk of their live and nation being dissassembled by a foreign threat.

      Today in the US over 50,000 people are killed in Auto accidents. We have Nuclear Plants that are an intrinsic threat of mistakes ( not terrorist attacks ) melting down a plant and the surrounding population.

      Yet we live with these threats.

      This war is endless? Crime is endless......drug taking is endless......car accidents are endless. This is NOT a war. Terrrorists are criminals and we have plenty of resources to track, arrest and convict criminals. You will NEVER defeat terrorism via military means. repeat: NEVER. Anyone who buys into using the military to defeat Ossama et al is a fool.

      The reality is that people in power usually get there because they are addicted to power, and like all addict will perform and act, tell any lie, do any action to ensure they can indulge their addiction. The US political system ensures that only crack junkie power crazed junkies get elected.

      Once they get enough power they tell more lies to get more crack power. Altruism? Bah!

      They believe that they can cement their hold on power via information - they want to know what you are saying they want to know what you are thinking. This attack on Google is motivated on knowing what you are thinking. What better way to find out? You think a thought.....bang you refine information related to that thought via google. Thinking of a wank? Search = favorite porn phrase. Thinking of criticism of your elected leaders = search for validation of your thoughts with other people or organizations. Once Google is defeated, then they can quietly continue to expand until Google is just an appendage of the power crack junkies search for negative thoughts that MUST BE STAMPED OUT.

      This is just a power grab by a load of crack junkies that in other times with a real press with spine would be sent for the therapy they need.
    • Temporary (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Trinition ( 114758 )

      The trend on this list is of (great) American liberals. Bush does not fit this mold imo, from various perspectives. Also importantly, the War on Terror is a much different type on conflict than the wars these Presidents faced. The enemy is borderless, uniformless, with unknown numbers, etc. This type of war is virtually endless, whether we are in Iraq or out of Iraq.

      This is exactly why I am worried! Against my will, some of my liberty has been given up in the name of security. But its not even tempora

  • by chris-chittleborough ( 771209 ) on Saturday January 21, 2006 @07:15AM (#14525674) Journal
    William Stevenson's book, A Man Called Intrepid, is about the activities of Sir William Stephenson and other intelligence leaders during WW2. It is not an autobiography; in fact, it is not really a biography.

    (This book was one of the first published after the Ultra secret, Colossus, Bletchley Park etc were declassified 30 years after WW2. It's a good read, full of fascinating information. For instance, did you know that Rommel's success was largely due to the U.S. State Department? It may still be one of the better single-volume histories of Allied intelligence during WW2. However it is not—how shall I put it?—a book that a good historian would use as a primary source.)

    The book does say what Mr. Cringely says it does, but it's alarming to see him describe it as an autobiography.

  • Rule of Law (Score:3, Insightful)

    by saskboy ( 600063 ) on Saturday January 21, 2006 @12:41PM (#14526954) Homepage Journal
    It'd be nice if Cringely put in something about the Rule of Law.

    It means that no one, not even the President, is above the law. That means that if the President commits a crime, then he/she is held responsible for the crime, and punished like you would be if you'd broken the law. Without the rule of law, there would be widespread corruption in the political and legal systems, because those governing and enforcing the law would be the people in charge, and not the electorate.

    There are systems in place to take over the country should the President find himself in jail for authorizing illegal spying.
  • Time will tell. (Score:3, Informative)

    by Irvu ( 248207 ) on Saturday January 21, 2006 @02:50PM (#14527650)
    From the article:
    Only time will tell, though, if what they are doing is legal.


    No, We the People will tell whether this was legal. It wasn't and isn't. As Cringley noted in his article, the taps were made without the authorization of the FISA court. It is the FISA court which covers exactly these kinds of things. Therefore they are illegal. There exists no special holes in the statutes for presidents who are too lazy, and no openings for things that do not meet the standard.

    The very reason that we have a FISA court is to provide some oversight of the process itself and to ensure that the shotgun approach so favored by past presidents is not done.

    It still shocks me that people are debating this or, worse yet, accepting Bush's half-assed lines about "inherent authority". These taps are a patent violation of both the letter and the Spirit of the FISA law. What the hell more do we need?
  • by Software Cowboy ( 9112 ) on Saturday January 21, 2006 @03:41PM (#14527897)
    Having been in the intelligence community (though not NSA), I think it is clear why people are confused on this issue. The administration is treating the "war on terror" as a literal war on terror. Under that definition, the President can intercept these communications to suspected Al Qaeda members as part of a military campaign. Many of the people who are up in arms about this are viewing the "war on terror" as an extended police operation. FISA clearly applies to criminal investigations. It is generally accepted that military actions in war time are held to a different standard.

    I believe the courts will probably uphold the administration's version, since they are in many cases, choosing to engage those on the other end of the communication with military (deadly) force. I think if they were just trying to arrest people and prosecute them, the administration's case would be far weaker.

    I don't know that it is as clear cut as those on either side say. We'll have to wait for the courts to decide.

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