House Approves Warrantless Wiretapping Extension 342
An anonymous reader writes "The House of Representatives voted 227-183 to update the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) to allow warrantless wiretapping of telephone and electronic communications. The vote extends the FISA amendment for six months. 'The administration said the measure is needed to speed the National Security Agency's ability to intercept phone calls, e-mails and other communications involving foreign nationals "reasonably believed to be outside the United States." Civil liberties groups and many Democrats said it goes too far, possibly enabling the government to wiretap U.S. residents communicating with overseas parties without adequate oversight from courts or Congres.'"
poster...post right (Score:2, Informative)
"The House of Representatives voted 227-183 to update the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) to allow warrantless wiretapping of telephone and electronic communications."
But the first Sentence of the story you linked to reads
"The House handed President Bush a victory Saturday, voting to expand the government's abilities to eavesdrop without warrants on foreign suspects whose communications pass through the United States."
That last part about "warrants on foreign suspects whose
mod parent down (Score:5, Informative)
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Cost-benefit (Score:3, Insightful)
That's true. So, what's the cost of it? Possible violation of privacy... And the benefit? The government will be able to learn of foreign threats faster. You see, snooping on the two people abroad was and remains legal (Echelon, anyone?). It is just when one of the suspects is in the US, that the government runs into problems.
Is the benefit worth the cost? Not sure
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World War II was a war with readily identifiable enemies, discrete military and political goals, and concrete benchmarks for meeting those goals. There were also 'victory conditions' easily defined, that marked, once achieved, the conclusion of the war. The "War on Terror" is none of those things, and has no discernible victory conditions.
Comparing an extraordinary or constitutionally-questionable surveillance power or privilege from WWII to one today is beyond absurd. Unlike in a regular war, which typic
No, border searches (Score:2)
Like it or not, the US (and most nations) have always exerted strong jurisdiction over what crosses their borders. Information isn't exempt.
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Of the states that were in contention or had highly strange disparities between exit polls and actual counts, did you bother to check what the state policies are in regard to popular votes equating to electoral votes? If I'm not mistaken, both Ohio and Florida laws directly link the electoral vote result to the collective popular vote results. In that case, Gore should have won.
It's one thing to state general rules, but to see wher
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So they say. And that's "President" Baboon to you, frenchie.
Actually, it was 52% of the people who voted, which came to about 20-something percent of the population. Factor in the religious looneys who thought Bush was gonna outlaw abortion and you're left with about 16% of the population over 18. Remember all those long lines for polling places in Black neighborhoods? Now we're down to about 12%.
Given that in 2004 the Attorney General was pushin
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At least when the Dems cheated, the country got JFK.
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Re:poster...post right (Score:5, Informative)
The opportunity for judicial review is minimal, but Lofgren overstates the matter by saying that there are no checks and balances at all.
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Currently President SFB is threatening to veto the act in any case because it does not meet his crietria for lack of accountability.
It seems unlikely that he will follow through. But in any case the ammendment times out in six months. By which time we will in all likelihood be deep into the Gonzalez constitutional crisis. It would be nice if Congress would deal with Go
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FISA court proceedures, draft 1
1. If, the suspect ever said anything bad about me, President Bush or "tricky" Dick Cheney,
2. Or, the suspect has ever filed a petition to challenge the legality of the warrentless surveillance,
3. Or, I, President Bush, "tricky" Dick Cheney, or the editorial board at Fox News really want the warrentless serveillance to be approved,
4. Then, approval for warrentless surveillance on the suspect is to be approved.
It's a surprisingly low bar.
Re:poster...post right (Score:5, Insightful)
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But, I have a better solution. Just let all foreign nationals get the message that is made here and stop communicating to and via
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If your goal is to cripple US foreign intelligence capability and put us at a marked and distinct disadvantage in countless respects to the intelligence services of the rest of the modern world, then we should put that suggestion on the top of our list.
Nope. Just anything in the US. (Score:2)
Nope. As long as the tap is placed in Afghanistan or such, then it is fine.
If you're placing a tap in the US, then you need a warrant.
So what you're saying is that anyone with any cl
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Even if the communication isn't intercepted in the United States, if foreign communication travels through the United States, under the current law it requires a warrant. In situations such as this, the fact that a portion of a communication (where the two parties are outside the United States) travels through equipment in the United States is incidental.
So it would seem that the methods you appear to be advocating have failed.
(I'll just ignore the
Explain the fallacy. (Score:2)
Explain where the "fallacy" is.
If you have to lie, then you've lost already. I never said that "all signals intelligence must be a failure". Despite you putting quotation marks around it.
I said that we could not even stop the drug trade. After YEARS of being able to tap communications outside the US.
And the drug trade move a LOT more material and people than terrorism does
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You have said that twice now. It is fallacious to draw that conclusion. That's the fallacy. No lies; sorry to disappoint.
And claiming that you don't know your history is an easy claim to make if you think foreign signals intelligence hasn't worked.
Lastly, we're not even talking about drugs, and you chose to bring it up. News
Look at the facts. (Score:2)
It isn't that it does not work. It is that it is not sufficient for even the "War on Drugs".
Yeah, keep repeating yourself. The FACT is that we have been tapping their lines and they are still able to move
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No. This does not permit this at all, in any way, shape, or form.
You are mistaken as to what this law does, and why.
You want a law clarifying that foreign surveillance, performed overseas, doesn't require warrants when the communication happens to be routed through the US? Then pass that law, not th
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If warrants are no longer necessary to wiretap, where exactly is the check to see if the people being wiretapped are foreign nationals? The whole point of a warrant is to make sure that a requested invasive measure is being applied properly.
Now you say:
I didn't say anything about "all foreign signals intelligence". The issue here is monitoring communications by individuals inside the United States.
No, it's not, at all.
It's about monitoring communications by individuals outside the United States, wh
Pure technical information as to what is going on (Score:2)
The deal is not that we are tapping foreign nationals exactly. The case this bill is meant to solve is more complex - tapping communications from other countries that route through our own. Because we have such a large communication infrastructe it is not infrequent th
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You put in your story
"The House of Representatives voted 227-183 to update the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) to allow warrantless wiretapping of telephone and electronic communications."
But the first Sentence of the story you linked to reads
"The House handed President Bush a victory Saturday, voting to expand the government's abilities to eavesdrop without warrants on foreign suspects whose communications pass through the United States."
That last part about "warrants on foreign suspects whose communications pass through the United States" is SOMEWHAT IMPORTANT!!!
You made it read as if the pres got full permission to wiretap anybody without a warrant which is completely wrong. Instead of omitting the parts that you don't like, be honest and include them.
What I don't understand is what organized criminal, in this age of easy cryptography, would actually talk about their criminal activities over the phone? Even using Skype you can communicate with someone without real fear of eavesdroppers, and using GPG Osama himself could speak easy.
Are criminals really still communicating over the phone?
Re:poster...post right (Score:5, Insightful)
You're so naive.
I don't know how many times I've said this, and people still don't get it. When deciding whether a law is good or bad, you should always assume that the worst scum of the earth are going to be exploiting it for their own evil agendas, and then decide if you can live with its consequences.
Let's see what the Republican who defended the law says about it:
So everything--including eavesdropping on domestic calls--is fair game if there is a reason to suspect that the American is a threat. Who gets to decide if the American is a threat? Why, the President and Attorney General, of course! And who do they have to tell? No one! And they have to be a threat of committing some sort of terrorist act, right? Of course not, they can be deemed a threat for any ol' reason they damned well please! "Wow, that person may get me voted out of office. I deem them a threat to national security." Don't think it could happen? You're not thinking hard enough, and you're still not assuming that the worst scum of the earth are in charge.
If you can't see the potential for abuse of this law, then you're beyond naive, you're an idiot. And if you think that George Bush would never abuse it in this way because he's such a nice man who is looking out for our safety, then imagine it in the hands of Hillary Clinton, because you're also giving it to whoever takes office after Bush, and whoever takes office after that, and whoever takes office after that. Do you trust whoever will be president in 20 years, even though you have no freakin' clue who that will be?
At the risk of going all Godwin in this thread, imagine that 20 years from now, a new Adolph Hitler manages to win the election. Do you trust him not to abuse the law too? Don't ever ask if you think the people in charge now will abuse the law, ask if Adolph Hitler would. Government is supposed to be designed in such a way that if a branch of government does become corrupted by a Hitler-like person, we'd be okay in the end because the other two branches would compensate for it with their checks and balances. Laws like this are specifically designed, though, to take those checks and balances away from other branches and concentrate the power in one branch (in this case, the executive branch). No matter how much you think it will only be used with good intentions, it will be abused at some point.
By passing this bill, Congress has failed us miserably yet again, and the biggest reason why is because of naive little Bush cheerleaders who are too stupid to know how government works.
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Ben Franklin said:
Those who would give up essential liberty, to purchase a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety.
Sad but true. If people really think that this is gonna just be used for the big, bad, terrorist
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You mean like the naive Bush cheerleaders in the Democrat controlled house? I don't disagree with anything you're saying, but I think ignoring the fact that both parties are at least ok enough with it to get it passed worries me somewhat. The Democrats, if they had a backbone, could've stopped it.
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If you believe that foreign signals intelligence should be burdened with warrant requirements because it incidentally travels through the United States, then we're in disagreement.
This is an update to a law so that intelligence agencies can reasonably execute their longstanding foreign intelligence roles within the law.
Posted Right (Score:2)
Communications with anyone. There is practically no need for any evidence that anyone being spied on has commited any crime, is a terrorist, or is of any value in getting any evidence of crime or terrorism. Our human rights to protection from unreasonable searches, to presumption of innocence, to
Change the focus. (Score:2)
Ask them if they'll be happy when President Hillary Clinton has these same executive powers.
Without judicial oversight.
With years of experience knowing what NOT to put on paper or telephone recordings.
With a Congress full of Democrats to support her.
It's not whether your team gets super-secret legal authority to do whatever. It's whether the other team gets super-secret leg
Sheepocrats (Score:5, Insightful)
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Voting for a minor party means that you've siphoned votes from one of the major party candidates. How dare you steal their votes by voting f
Re:Sheepocrats (Score:5, Informative)
Chances are your congressional Democrats voted against the measure, unlike a single Republican senator and only two Republican representatives.
Democrats currently have 49 votes in the Senate (Senator Johnson from South Dakota is still out sick). That's 11 votes shy of passing legislation -- you need 60 votes to defeat Republican filibusters -- and 18 votes shy of overcoming a Bush veto of any nonevil legislation.
The 41 House Democrats [house.gov] who voted for this measure disgust me -- but 181 Democrats voted no. (Republicans? They rushed to destroy the Fourth Amendment by a vote of 186 to 2.)
In the Senate, the goddamned Republicans were unanimously in favor of this bill. Sixteen goddamned Democrats joined them [yahoo.com], and if any one of them represents you I hope you consider it your duty to let them know early, often, and loudly how ashamed you are of them.
But the other 27 Democrats, joined by all zero of their nonevil Republican colleagues, voted against this horrible law.
Am I sick with anger about this? Sicker than you -- but I'm also angry about this "Democrats are totally useless" crap. Don't like how thin and impotent the congressional Democrats are? Don't like how imperfect their leadership is in the face of nearly total Republican evil? Fine, neither do I -- but I think it's a bit less counterproductive to dwell on monolithic Republican evil than the Democrats' failure to achieve omnipotence in the last election, won't you?
I posted five angry letters to congresspeople (and two big thank yous to my good Democratic senator and my good Democratic congressperson) before I came posting to Slashdot. What did you do?
FISA allows permission three days later already (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:FISA allows permission three days later already (Score:5, Informative)
First, the basics of "FISA". FISA is a statue meant to govern how and when government agencies may gather FOREIGN intelligence. FISA warrants are warrants issued by FISA-established courts authorizing the government to wiretap or survey individuals or phone numbers. A FISA warrant cannot be issued on domestic communications, since American residents and citizens are (yes, still) covered by the United States Constitution's protection against unreasonable search and seizure. So, to boil it down,
Second, warrantless wiretaps are and will always be legal (and constitutional) when both ends of the communication are outside the United States, not American citizens, and no part of the communication is routed electronically through the territorial US. Why? Because such people and communications are utterly outside the jurisdiction of the US Constitution. Think of it this way, should the US have to get a warrant (FISA or otherwise) to intercept a satellite phone conversation between Bin Laden and al-Zawahiri in Pakistan? What jurisdiction does a US court have to rule on that matter? Answer: None.
Third, the legislation in question was needed and rushed in before Congress goes on vacation because of a new ruling by a FISA judge, which had the effect of overruling the NSA's previously established powers under FISA. In other words, a judge decided in a new ruling to overturn the way things had been previously been done. This had the effect of placing our intelligence community in <a panic because it effectively crippled our ability to intercept foreign communications. See this Newsweek article for more info. http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/20075751/site/newswee
Fourth, the legal issue at hand. The brand new FISA judge ruling concerned the issue of when you know one end of the conversation is foreign, but you don't know where the other one is. In other words, should an unknown second party be assumed to be American or in the US for purposes of foreign intelligence? The new ruling said yes, but previous rulings had said no. For more info on this, see the LA Times. http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la
The concern of the intelligence community was that given the current advanced state of technology and the ability to mask identities, the ruling effectively destroyed the ability of the US to wiretap ANY communication where one side was anonymous.
Maybe that's what some people here on Slashdot want, which is fine to argue. But I hope the discussion is at least conducted soberly and with some attachment to the actual difficult legal and national defense questions at hand.
foreigner are "people" too...! (Score:3, Interesting)
remember, the constitution was supposed to be self-evident! why is wiretapping US citizens NOT OK while tapping foreigners OK?!?!?! what a great example of pr
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Third, the legislation in question was needed and rushed in before Congress goes on vacation because of a new ruling by a FISA judge, which had the effect of overruling the NSA's previously established powers under FISA. In other words, a judge decided in a new ruling to overturn the way things had been previously been done.
My understanding is that they had only "previously been done" that way by the current administration since FISA was passed. That is, the judge didn't change precedent, he just ruled that Bush's surveillance program was illegal.
The brand new FISA judge ruling concerned the issue of when you know one end of the conversation is foreign, but you don't know where the other one is. In other words, should an unknown second party be assumed to be American or in the US for purposes of foreign intelligence? The new ruling said yes, but previous rulings had said no.
What, exactly, is so bad about assuming they're American? All it means is you need to get a warrant, right? Which is something you could do easily and retroactively under the existing law.
The concern of the intelligence community was that given the current advanced state of technology and the ability to mask identities, the ruling effectively destroyed the ability of the US to wiretap ANY communication where one side was anonymous.
Maybe that's what some people here on Slashdot want, which is fine to argue.
You have failed to show how the existing law would prevent the US from tapping foreign communi
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Easy.
The current law prevents the US from tapping foreign communications without a warrant:
1.) If one side of the communication is foreign and one or more additional parties masks their identities or the location can't be determined, and
2.) Most crucially, if the communication is routed through com
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This fixes FISA so that communication between persons exclusively outside of the United States without a warrant, even if a portion of the communication is physically routed through the US, which, under the current law, would require a warrant.
It's a much-needed update to an antiquated law. The fact that you think monitoring communications between foreigners outside of the United States should require any
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We need to be able to monitor foreign communications, without a warrant, including those that may be incidentally traveling through the United States.
This is a problem that will never be solved, because, with today's technology, it may not be apparent where the ends of a conversation are.
The two issues you note are inextricably intertwined. The only practical way to intercept the kind of communication the NSA is looking for is to do exactly what they'r
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All governements spy on other governements, and even citizens. Ask the French about spying on US businessmen travelling abroad, to gain intelligence for French biusinesses - something the head of french intelligence admitted occurs on TV some years ago. That includes bugging busness class on Air France...
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First, unwarranted wiretaps do NOT "happen legal in [our] country". That's the whole point of updating the FISA law: monitoring the conten
This traffic doesn't need a warrant (Score:2)
The problem this addresses is that sometimes, foreign communications (including communications exclusively between individuals outside of the United States) now travels through switching or network equipment within the United States, which would require a warrant under the current antiquated rules.
See this Newsweek article [msn.com] for a basic overview of the iss
Imagined responses to this (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah, right. We had their communications shut down. Whenever a legislative lemming wants to pass more laws, you should ask whether the existing laws were inadequate, or the people that were supposed to be enforcing them. We had FBI alerts on the 9/11 hijackers and a briefing on President Bush's desk. We've had FISA for years and its restrictions are so lax - allowing even for warrants after the fact - that any protest of it can't be for good reason. Instead the incompetent and corrupt are getting more power to abuse, while making sure their buddies make money off the taxpayer.
I don't want to hear "Proud to be an American" from one more person who buys into this. Sit down and shut it up. I'm fed up with people who think it's patriotic to abandon the most basic, essential reasons this country exists. Not only should we listen to old Ben Franklin about giving up freedom for security, we should realize that freedom *is* our security. Bush and his crew have killed the last of our existing safeguards. They have paved the way for full-on oligarchic tyrrany here. We not only need to stop voting in people who do this, or supposed opposition parties that enable it, we need to re-establish the law of this land.
I was excited at last November's election, but I've repented of it now. I'm neither Libertarian nor Constitutionalist, but I wouldn't hesitate to work with them to fix this. We need Greens in on this because nothing's safe when the whims of the rich trump the law. Most Americans are convinced that something's really wrong with this country, we're just not agreed on what exactly, but this is should be clear to everyone - we need the rule of law back.
Bin Laden was never a good excuse for destroying our country from within in the first place!
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For once, this isn't actually throwing your vote away, either.
Ron Paul is the only Republican who actually would have a chance of winning the general election. Anyone who thinks Giuliani or Romney can win the general election are entirely delusional, as both those are positioning themselves as Bush 2.0 to win the primary. You can't 'move outside for the primary, move to the center for the election' when moving back to the center in that time would require FTL travel.
In other words, thanks to the large dis
Repeat afer me: (Score:5, Insightful)
Email is easy, but are there any of the current crop of 'giveaway' cell phones that support it?
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Apparently not enough Democrats (Score:4, Insightful)
Isn't this one of those things that a lot of people here thought the Democrats would fix once they took congress? Or is it simply OK now that the Democrats support warrant-less wiretaps?
Either way, we're getting a valuable lesson in two-party politics.
They did exactly what they said they would do (Score:3, Insightful)
Face it, the American public at large does not care about FISA issues, Free Speech, or Habeas Corpus.
Re:They did exactly what they said they would do (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:They did exactly what they said they would do (Score:5, Insightful)
This is the exact problem the republic is meant to solve. The average person doesn't have the time to learn what they need to know to do their job, and to learn what they need to do to make informed decisions on government policy. The solution is to select a few people to represent you and delegate your decision making to them. These representatives should not be making the choices you would make, they should be making the choices you would make if you sat down and studied the facts of the matter in detail.
At some point, however, we stopped electing representatives, and started electing leaders. From then on, it started to go down hill.
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Tweedledum and Tweedledee. There is only one party, the corporate party. The so-called parties just represent different corporate factions within that party. There's going to have to be a lot more pushing back from the public before the Democrats will do anything. Even then it will be reluctant and half-assed. They're just playing good cop to the Republicans' bad cop. If you want to understand the Democrats, go back and learn about Kennedy's
Every one of these idiots should be shot... (Score:2)
This constant harping on the bugaboo of terrorism as the reason for doing idiotic shit like this is just a cover for being able to conduct the war on drugs and the war on filesharing and the war on our basic rights as free people.
Fuck them all. Next electi
Re:Every one of these idiots should be shot... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Every one of these idiots should be shot... (Score:4, Informative)
http://clerk.house.gov/evs/2007/roll836.xml [house.gov]
Actual Story Title: (Score:4, Insightful)
Remember Democrats are the Majority (Score:2, Insightful)
Considering that Democrats are now the majority in Congress, this bill would not have passed without their strong support. Being able to wiretap foreign communications between terrorists without having to rush out and obtain a warrant before the communication is dropped is critical in combating
Re:Remember Democrats are the Majority (Score:5, Informative)
There are 435 seats in the house of representatives. Of these, 410 voted. To gain a majority from those voting, they required 206 votes. The Republican party controls 202 seats, meaning that if they had voted en bloc, they only needed 4 Democrats to vote with them in order to win. I haven't seen the exact break down of voting for this act, but it's entirely possible that 202 Republicans and 25 Democrats voted for this bill, and 183 Democrats voted against it.
The Democrats only control congress if they all agree. It doesn't take many dissenters to lose that control. We've seen this a few times here in the UK where the party on government has had a very small majority; they've failed to get acts passed because one or two members of their own party decided to abstain, letting the other two parties get the majority vote.
DEM: 41 yea, 181 nay. REP: 186 yea, 2 nay. (Score:2, Informative)
http://clerk.house.gov/evs/2007/roll836.xml [house.gov]
Freedom (Score:3, Insightful)
See also "minilove" and "minitruth"
'Protect America Act' adds a big loophole (Score:3, Informative)
He had this power before, but he had to swear on oath the truth about the spying, now he can swear a lie on oath and simply claim he was misinformed or the evidence given to him was incomplete.
The new wording is this:
"`Sec. 105B. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, the Director of National Intelligence and the Attorney General, may for periods of up to one year authorize the acquisition of foreign intelligence information concerning persons reasonably believed to be outside the United States if the Director of National Intelligence and the Attorney General determine, based on the information provided to them, that--"
The old wording was this:
"(1) Notwithstanding any other law, the President, through the Attorney General, may authorize electronic surveillance without a court order under this subchapter to acquire foreign intelligence information for periods of up to one year if the Attorney General certifies in writing under oath that--
(A) the electronic surveillance is solely directed at--
(i) the acquisition of the contents of communications transmitted by means of communications used exclusively between or among foreign powers, as defined in section 1801 (a)(1), (2), or (3) of this title; or
(ii) the acquisition of technical intelligence, other than the spoken communications of individuals, from property or premises under the open and exclusive control of a foreign power, as defined in section 1801 (a)(1), (2), or (3) of this title;
(B) there is no substantial likelihood that the surveillance will acquire the contents of any communication to which a United States person is a party; "
Comment removed (Score:3, Insightful)
Blackmailing Congress (Score:4, Funny)
Blackmailing not just Democrats. Blackmailing Republicans, too, to enforce their lockstep rubber stamps. But Republicans also get the offer of getting cut in on some power (as long as it doesn't cross Cheney/Bush). Democrats just get cut in on cosmetic power sharing, so they can be the decoy party in our soviet politburo.
Swap your iPhones for Cryptophones (Score:3, Insightful)
YOU are an accused terrorist (Score:3, Insightful)
Anyone who believes this is limited to "foreign" intercepts is naive and ignorant to say the least.
We will never know who is being spied on because it is "secret".
Just assume it is you because it probably is then go read the fourth amendment to the constitution.
Prepare to be angry if you're not already.
I have only three words... (Score:3, Insightful)
I have only three words...
Encrypt, encrypt, encrypt!
They have no right to listen, and no reason to be suspiscious. I happen to live in a two-party state [callcorder.com] where recording of phone calls has to be known to all parties on the call. Since they're not notifying me or the other party on the calls I make, their use of the data they may glean, is inadmissible and against the law.
Just encrypt everything, locking down your conversations, speak in code, use encrypted SMS messages and so on.
Don't let them in, because they have no right or reason to be there. Period.
They want to make it hard for us to enjoy our freedoms, then I'm more than happy to make them earn their right to violate them by making it ridiculously hard to decrypt/brute/crack any encryption that I may use.
It's OK, they're just foreigners. (Score:4, Insightful)
and I did not speak out
because I was not a Jew.
Then they came for the Communists
and I did not speak out
because I was not a Communist.
Then they came for the trade unionists
and I did not speak out
because I was not a trade unionist.
Then they came for me
and there was no one left
to speak out for me.
fools, cowards, traitors (Score:3, Insightful)
They are fools because they just rolled over to placate the 28% who will never vote for them anyway, while pissing off the millions that actually do vote for them. They are fools because they enable the Big Lie from the administration that we need to cut back on liberties and oversight because they endanger us.
They are cowards because 6 years after 911, they still roll over for the most unpopular president since Nixon when Bush accuses them of being weak. And they still haven't gotten it through their thick fucking skulls that by giving into the right wing rather than standing up to them, Democrats are epitomizing weakness, not strength.
And lastly, they are traitors for egregiously violating their oath of office, in which they promise to defend the Constitution. [senate.gov] Not the country, though the right wing talking point that this is "to protect us" is bullshit. The Constitution. And this is why I hold Webb especially responsible: how many government jobs has the man had? How many oaths of office has he taken? He just broke those oaths and sold us out.
Spineless (Score:2)
Disappointed in Amy Klobusher, D-MN (Score:3, Insightful)
But perhaps she isn't rising to the office where faithfully upholding the law means upholding the constitution and the _rule_of_law_.
Democrats will not protect your freedom either (Score:3, Informative)
The enemy of your enemy is not your friend.
We are still in Iraq and there is no end in sight. Rather than having the backbone to bringing the measure to withdraw back to the floor again and again to push it through, and continue to push their campaign promises in the media, they have effectively given up on the issue, whining to their supporters and the media that it is too hard.
And now these Democrats are actively working with this administration, the same administration they told us is the most corrupt and secretive in history, to sell out yet more of our freedoms, to give yet more power to this president and the executive branch.
They are, our representatives, nearly every one of them, pathetic, spineless, schmucks. They have betrayed us all once again.
And it should come as no surprise, because these are the same Democrats and Republicans who sold us out by writing the president a blank check in Iraq. The same Democrats and Republicans who sold out our liberties by signing onto the biggest forfeiture of our liberties since the establishment of this nation. The same Democrats and Republicans who proudly signed the bill granting retroactive immunity to prosecution for every military and government agent who has tortured, kidnapped, and committed atrocities in our name.
We must act now to take back our liberties, our dignity, and our good name in the world; it is the most important cause of this age. If 2008 leaves us with Giuliani, Hillary, McCain, Obama, Romney, or any of their ilk in office, we will see more of the same and worse, and it will be too late. It will be too late to restore the freedoms that have been stolen from us. 2012 will come and go, and the robbery of the patriot act and the legacy of this administration's unprecedented executive power grab will be solidified in our nation's history and in the public conscience.
If you do not act now, what has been taken from us will never be restored, and your children's children will look back upon this generation, if there is freedom enough to look at all, as the generation that finally lost it all, lost that for which the blood of countless patriots was shed, and November 4th 2008 as the day the Republic finally died.
It is only the office of President of the United States of America that can save us from this fate. And in this battle, Freedom has one final front. Your help is urgently needed this very week. Is your freedom worth even an hour of your time? Now is your opportunity to prove it. You must sign up today. Mission information will be emailed to you directly. http://www.ronpaul2008.com/events/iowa-straw-poll
Re:And The Reason Is (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
The purpose of FISA is to provide oversight to wiretapping of communications between *known and suspected enemy foreign nationals outside the country* and US citizens. If a foreign terrorist is calling someone in the US, it would be stupid to *not* be listening.
This bill is to bring an old law up
Re:And The Reason Is (Score:4, Insightful)
Legislation like this makes me terribly uncomfortable for reasons I shouldn't have to explain, and anyone who believes that we should be jumping at every shadow needs their head examined. The biggest problem is how accepting of idiotic legislation that erodes basic freedoms the average American has become.
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Oh, I don't know...maybe the fact that the call is originating in a foreign country, and that it terminates in the same or a different foreign country?
Also, just to be clear...the "suspected enemy/terrorist" qualifier tag is just to save the NSA time and narrow things down. *All* countries have *always* reserved the right to eavesdrop at their discretion, to the
Re:And The Reason Is (Score:4, Insightful)
It doesn't matter.
A warrant is not required to listen to communications between foreign nationals outside of the United States, regardless of what kind of activity they are involved in. This is communication the United States has always been free to monitor at will.
The problem is that now some communication, even between foreigners outside of the United States, gets routed through networking or switching equipment inside the United States, which, under the outdated FISA rules, would require a warrant.
This fixes that problem, and for you to suggest the United States shouldn't be engaged in aggressive global foreign intelligence gathering and threat monitoring is ridiculous. And yes, you should have to explain why this update to an antiquated law makes you uncomfortable. It has NOTHING to do with jumping at shadows. This idea that people only support things like this out of fear is incorrect. This is fair-game surveillance of foreign communication which is perfectly legitimate on the global stage and has gone on for decades. Pretending the United States shouldn't be doing it is sticking your head in the sand to unprecedented depths.
Something ain't right there ... (Score:3, Insightful)
If it has "gone on for decades", then what is the problem NOW?
Why and How has the existing system suddenly failed?
Re: (Score:2)
Why and How has the existing system suddenly failed?
This system failed because more and more foreign communication is traveling through equipment physically within the United States.
Under the current law, monitoring of such communication, which never required (and shouldn't require) a warrant, suddenly requires a warrant, because of the incidental fact that some of the traffic travels through the US.
This fixes that critical problem.
See this artic [msn.com]
How is that a problem? (Score:2)
How is that a problem? It would seem to me that it would be easier to tap that way.
And ... ?
FISA allows up to 72 hours AFTER the event to get a warrant. Even in
Re: (Score:2)
Uh, it is, but when that happens, it requires a warrant.
Monitoring of communication between two parties outside the United States does not require a warrant, and never will. But because of today's technology, sometimes that traffic can flow through the United States.
Which suddenly means it is subject to the warrant requirements.
Which it shouldn't be.
And
FISA allows up to 72 hours AFTER the event to get a warrant. Even in
The problem now is... (Score:2)
Let's make it easy. Here's the scenario. (Score:3, Funny)
Unnamed extra #1: "Sir, you need to see this. It's Osama's cell phone! And the call is coming across OUR circuit!"
JB: "Dammit! He's up to something. I want that call intercepted and get me a translator! I want to know what he's saying and to whom he is saying it!"
Unnamed extra #2: "But sir, if we don't get a warrant within the next 72 hours, that will be ILLEGAL!"
JB: "No problem. I only need 24. Just tap that
Let them have their wiretapping (Score:2)
Encryption should be ubiquitous in modern communication, and this is just another argument for it. Privacy and freedom aren't things we should take for granted. They need to be actively maintained, because there will always be nefarious elements working to undermine them. The day that encryption becomes illegal, or the day that we are required to give encryption keys to law enforcement upon request is the day that I leave this country.
Re: (Score:2)
Um, yes. You're referring to a different part of the law, concerned with a different scenario. It has different requirements for intercepts that are carried on physical wire within the US borders, and was written without consideration that the participants could *both* be foreign nationals, and *both* be locate
exactly (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
The reason that this bill is so insidious is that it appears reasonable at a glance, but it greatly expands the power of the executive and allows for the surveillance of almost anyone. In section 105A of the statute, it redefines "electronic surveillance," and allows for any surveillance which is "direc
Re: (Score:2)
Nobody here's dumb enough to fall on your sword.
Re: (Score:2)
I'm saying I believe I have the freedom to write everything in that above post without fear that the secret police might show up in the middle of the night to take me to an education centre. So when I see people cringing in their expressions whether they be online or in real-life I am saddened because they're conforming to a shape that benefits not themselves but others.
Ballot box, Soap box, Jury box, Ammo box. I thi
Re: (Score:2)
Re:huh? (Score:5, Insightful)
Oh wait
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Of course, that doesn't change the fact that the Democrats control the House and should have insisted on more privacy safeguards. I really am starting to get tired of the Democrats calling foul on Bush administration law violations and then pass laws making the programs legal.
History has shown that when the Democrats throw away their focus groups and polls and start standing up for their beliefs, they do well. O
Political brinksmanship and an "October Surprise" (Score:5, Insightful)
They want a bill that gives the administration wiretap powers, but subject to independent judicial oversight. However, any limitation on the Administration's power to wiretap faces a Republican filibuster in the Senate.
This leaves the Democrats with a choice: pass a bill without oversight measures, or be blamed for stopping the wirtap program altogether. Stopping the program altogether exposes them to an "October Surprise": a terrorist attack that might hypothetically been prevented if the administration could wiretap as they pleased.
Never mind the logical niceties: that the program could have operated effectively with judicial oversight, that the Republicans filibustered the bill, or that the Administration didn't have the Arabic language skills to handle all the intercepts they might have made. The Republican line from the last two elections was that a vote for a Democrat was a victory for the terrorist, that Democrats are traitors who are on the side of the terrorists. Nothing would suit them better than proclaiming that in front of another smoking hole in a major American city.
So, the Democrats punted for six months to see if the administration's popularity drops enough to get the bill they want through the Senate. The process will repeat until the Administration is so wounded nobody will stand up for it, or until after the 2008 elections.
Cowardly? Certainly. But you're right in one thin:, the problem is its the same old stupid, unreasonable boss. The problem is us. If we don't have the balls to defend the freedoms our ancestors handed down to us, then we don't deserve those freedoms.