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New FISA Bill Would Grant Telcoms Immunity; Vote Is Tomorrow 496

An anonymous reader writes "This just in: a new 'compromise' FISA Bill (PDF) was just made public, which, the Electronic Frontier Foundation reports, 'contains blanket immunity for telecoms that helped the NSA break the law and spy on millions of ordinary Americans.' The House vote is tomorrow, June 20. After all the secret rooms and everything ... if they get immunity and the public never finds out what happened, the only other logical next step is to convince everyone I know not to get an iPhone." CNN covers this get-out-of-lawsuit play as well.
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New FISA Bill Would Grant Telcoms Immunity; Vote Is Tomorrow

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  • by Daimanta ( 1140543 ) on Thursday June 19, 2008 @02:42PM (#23863011) Journal
    /.ers will complain. Telcos will continue helping to spy.

    Film at 11
    • by CowboyNealOption ( 1262194 ) on Thursday June 19, 2008 @02:44PM (#23863051) Journal
      At least this vote will make it painfully clear which politicians should stay and which should be removed post-haste.
      • So it goes like this:
        1. Slashdotters identify policitians who represent a clear danger to civil liberties.
        2. Slashdotters attempt to spread the word about these problems.
        3. The vast majority of the voting populace either doesn't hear the message, doesn't understand it, or doesn't care.
        Generally, people only care about liberty when it's their own freedom being directly threatened.
        • by arkham6 ( 24514 ) on Thursday June 19, 2008 @02:59PM (#23863345)
          their direct freedoms ARE being threatened, but they are more concerned by Jamie Lynn Spears's new baby than boring things like 'civil liberties'.

          Media has replaced religion as the new opiate of the masses.
          • by bsDaemon ( 87307 ) on Thursday June 19, 2008 @03:05PM (#23863471)
            No -- they care when its their freedom to:

            1) own guns
            2) have abortions
            3) ban guns
            4) ban abortions
            5) have a gay marraige
            6) ban a gay marriage

            nothing else is going to active a critical mass of loud people to form a permanent bloc in the legislature.

            At least not in America. But hey, at least this time the politicos can say "but Sweeden is doing it, too!"
            • by spun ( 1352 ) <loverevolutionary&yahoo,com> on Thursday June 19, 2008 @03:13PM (#23863585) Journal

              At least not in America. But hey, at least this time the politicos can say "but Sweeden is doing it, too!"
              Politicians know better than to confuse voters.

              "Wait, what? What does wiretapping have to do with meatballs and massage? This guy is making my head hurt, that's it! I'm gonna vote for the guy who doesn't make me feel stupid."
          • by PopeRatzo ( 965947 ) * on Thursday June 19, 2008 @05:27PM (#23865927) Journal

            their direct freedoms ARE being threatened, but they are more concerned by...
            I have to disagree. I think you confuse that which is being pushed by the soapsellers and corporate shills who own the media and that which is important to Americans.

            The fact is, it's been a long time since the "mainstream" media has been "giving the consumer what they want". Today, the television and radio stations, along with the print media strictly exist to promote an agenda created by the most powerful corporate interests. Nobody cares about Jamie Lynn Spears' new baby (least of all Ms. Spears), but the media has made a decision that this story will occupy peoples' attention and divert them from the fact that they are being turned into 21st century serfs.

            Beyond that, the media has done everything they can to convince the citizens that there's nothing they can do to protect their civil liberties anyway. They do this by pushing the lie that all the political parties and politicians are the same and that a politician's stance about these issues is not as important as whether or not they wear patriotic jewelry or have the right skin-color.

            But, I believe you can only distract people from their disintegrating situation for so long. There are already signs of a coming backlash, and it's almost funny how when the rage and bitterness of the populace breaks the surface it sends the approved pundits and media mavens running to their fainting couches. We saw it when hundreds of thousands of citizens spontaneously demonstrated against the beginning of the Iraq War. The media said it was just a bunch of "dirty hippies" but anyone who was at one of these demonstrations could easily see that wasn't so. Or when the media assured us all that a particular corporate-sponsored candidate was "certain" to win the Presidential primary and an little-known (black!) progressive politician popped up and with the $20 and $50 donations knocked off the assumed "sure thing". Even today, they try to tell us that this young black man will not "play well" with certain segments of society, particularly "white women" and "working-class voters" (aka the stupid people they count on to watch American Idol), even though every single poll shows that this is not so!. Hell, they tried to convince us that George W. Bush was the "more likable" candidate when just about nobody liked him. I guarantee, these corporate lickspittles won't realize what's really happening until they're hung up by their feet in the public square.
        • by modestmelody ( 1220424 ) on Thursday June 19, 2008 @03:40PM (#23864077)
          Yeah, but I just wrote to my representative now that I saw this. So it does do something: To The Honorable Peter T. King: It has come to my attention that once again telecom immunity has reared its ugly head in a bill authored in the House of Representatives. As my representative in the United States Congress I must request that you oppose this bill. Immunity for corporate entities who cooperated with federal officials to break the law is not acceptable. In America, we hold criminals accountable, whether they are businessmen, military men, government officials, or law enforcement officers. FISA courts have time and time again proven themselves to be adequately expedient and sagacious in its role protecting Americans-- both from external threats and from threats against their rights. I implore that you cut through the rhetoric of a more "safe" America and instead continue to ensure there is an America worth protecting-- one which treats all its citizens as equal under the law and respects their rights to privacy.
        • by TheGratefulNet ( 143330 ) on Thursday June 19, 2008 @03:44PM (#23864167)
          Generally, people only care about liberty when it's their own freedom being directly threatened.

          here's my idea on how it could 'hit home':

          wiretap a bunch of random people. scan for 'juicy embarassing things' that they are saying. of course (...) make sure its not a national security thing - just find embarassing personal things that people are saying in private.

          THEN PUBLISH TRANSCRIPTS. once a day, from some random person, in the newspaper. keep doing it until people SEE THE LIGHT.

          eventually people will see that the talk is mostly personal stuff and not at all 'security issues'. at THAT point, they'll finally understand that this is just a power grab to scare and control the population.

          but until enough innocent people get caught in the net (heh heh) - nothing will change and our liberties will continue to erode.

          • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

            by algae ( 2196 )
            Better yet, start going through, and publishing the contents of, politicians' garbage. There's a ton of precedent now that people's trash on city streets is not protected private property anymore, let's see how some mayors and police chiefs like having the contents of their fridge, or unshredded paperwork disclosed.

            In fact, someone already beat me to it:
            http://cryptome.org/tia-brass.htm [cryptome.org]
      • by clampolo ( 1159617 ) on Thursday June 19, 2008 @03:08PM (#23863515)

        It's actually a lot worse than you think it is. They run polling to see which issues are important to a persons constituents. They also factor in who is in a tight campaign and who is safe. And then they decide among themselves who will vote for or against a measure.

        The most recent example I can think of this happening was the war appropriations bill. The Democratic Party wanted to pass the bill. But they made sure that Hillery and Obama were set to vote near the end, so that they could vote against the measure.

        You have to vote both these parties out if you want to get rid of this stuff. Not just the candidates that voted for this bill.

        • by rainman_bc ( 735332 ) on Thursday June 19, 2008 @03:20PM (#23863723)

          You have to vote both these parties out if you want to get rid of this stuff. Not just the candidates that voted for this bill.
          Which is why I don't understand the absence of third party choice in the USA. There's nothing wrong with voting for a third party. You're showing that you aren't interested in the top two choices. If enough of you had the courage to vote for a third party, it wouldn't be a problem. The fear of vote splitting is an excuse. Your vote is never a throw away vote, even if it's for a third party.
          • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

            by MBGMorden ( 803437 )
            The problem is that people don't care about enough stuff. They see the two party system as the following:

            Republican: Low taxes, Pro-life, Anti-free speech, pro-rich, pro-big business, Pro-gun, Religious, Anti-homosexual

            Democrat: High taxes, Pro-choice, Less Anti-free speech, pro-average citizen, Anti-gun, Secular, Pro-Healthcare

            To so many people, they really only care about 1 issue deeply, and so they vote based on that issue alone, and with two polar opposites it works well to always have a party that sup
            • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

              by mrchaotica ( 681592 ) *

              In truth my preference is that I want a system with the freedom the the Libertarians parade (ie, keep your hands off my guns, end the "war on drugs", leave the prostitutes/johns alone, don't outlaw scientific study like stem cell research, etc), but with more provided social services that the Democrats promise (ie, national healthcare, investment in national communications infrastructure, etc).

              You may want to look into the Green Party (although it, of course, won't fit your ideology perfectly either).

          • by Darby ( 84953 ) on Thursday June 19, 2008 @04:28PM (#23864953)
            Your vote is never a throw away vote, even if it's for a third party.

            No, your vote is *always* a throwaway *unless* you vote for a third party.
            Only with a third party is worthwhile change possible. Voting either of the two major parties is saying that the worst excesses of either are what you want to see more of.

        • by John Whitley ( 6067 ) on Thursday June 19, 2008 @05:43PM (#23866115) Homepage

          You have to vote both these parties out if you want to get rid of this stuff.
          THIS CAN'T WORK. The way the political systems in this country run right now, this is tantamount to asking all the air molecules to "just move to the left a bit" to give you a nice breeze.

          Third parties face huge barriers to entry due to a collection of factors. The first cut: a lot of intelligent folks simply stay away from politics in the first place due to these and other issues. The second cut: those interested in pursuing all but the most minor political positions really must be career-minded the way things work today. To have a viable career, this pretty much means running with one of the two major parties. (Head of snake, meet tail.) The third cut: unfortunately, many of the folks left after the first two cuts seem to be wholly unelectable. As in, if you read their platforms in detail, you realize that they're fscking nuts. At best, they are well-meaning but lack requisite insight into human nature and/or the real-world ramifications of their lofty ideas. At worst, they're really nuts: spouting off about eliminating UFO influence on our toaster ovens and the like. (My state's voter pre-election voter pamphlets occasionally offer excellent comic-relief while researching candidate backgrounds.)

          The more interesting question is why candidates in the "second cut" above don't rally around a third party. Part of the reason is simple: virtually none of the USA voting districts use a ranking-based system of election, such as IRV [wikipedia.org] or Condorcet [wikipedia.org]. This provides a barrier to entry most notably seen in the 2004 US Presidential election as the "Nader effect". Nader was never a viable candidate to win, so many voters felt they were forced to choose between "voting their conscience" and "voting for the lesser evil." The real effects are much deeper, however. An excellent third-party or independent candidate might win an election in such a system by garnering a lot of first and second place votes from voters across the spectrum. The effect could be rather de-polarizing, and would allow a foot in the door for new parties.

          Now all of this neglects other serious issues, such as campaign funding and media influence and coverage. Third-parties have an additional barrier in the form of achieving sufficient fund-raising to win a campaign, and achieving media backing. As sad as it sounds, it is absolutely necessary today to get the word out and successfully market a candidate to the people in order to win a contested election. This can require large to massive amounts of money... and the strings that go along with that.

          Media outlets get to further warp the funding/marketing issues by providing whatever balance and bias of coverage they want. Whether through carelessness, explicit bias, or even implicit biases, mass-media has come to have an astonishing effect on distorting our democratic processes. Not garnering media support can leave a campaign dead in the water. As a simple example, consider the viability of a candidate for any high-level office with a platform of serious media ownership reform. I have trouble imagining that getting very far.
        • by PopeRatzo ( 965947 ) * on Thursday June 19, 2008 @05:55PM (#23866289) Journal

          They run polling to see which issues are important to a persons constituents.
          No, it's not nearly that complicated. In fact, their campaigns, which by design cost a lot of money to run, are financed by wealthy corporate interests who then tell the representative exactly how to vote, and in many cases actually write the language of the bill to be voted on.

          The interesting thing that's been happening more often lately is that the politician actually votes counter to the polling that's done by their office as long as the lobbyists are emphatic enough and spend enough money. This of course, depends on how far away their re-election is. The votes of a political party on an issue like this are carefully choreographed, so that the reps who are up for re-election soon are protected by the guys who have several years until their re-election campaign.

          There's a fair amount of push-back lately though. In this case, for example, the three Democrats who are supporting this horrible telco amnesty legislation are facing a well-financed campaign, made up of small donations from people like me and my wife, who are running very damaging advertisements in their districts and helping prospective primary challengers mount campaigns when their reelection comes up.

          Steny Hoyer for example, the piece of shit that he is, may have to take his meals at home for quite some time after this vote takes place, since most of his constituents and neighbors will see the well-made ad that's going to run in his district.

          Here's a fascinating fact-oid: Comcast (one of Mr. Hoyer's top contributors) has actually turned down running this advertisement, claiming that it's libelous or something. They have forgotten that there are more ways to get a message out these days...

          NOW how do you feel about the consolidation of media and telecommunications industries? Do you REALLY think net neutrality isn't important?
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by Weezul ( 52464 )
        You can give money specifically to punish those who supported the bill : http://www.actblue.com/page/fisa
    • That about sums it up. Time to archive this discussion.

      I would have settled for granting the telco's immunity in return for prohibiting them from further complicity, but oh well. Anyone who didn't think they'd get immunity is worse than naive. Both major parties are in their pocket.
    • by TheGratefulNet ( 143330 ) on Thursday June 19, 2008 @02:46PM (#23863107)
      correct - people who realize what's going on are already freaking out.

      the politicians either know what they're doing (and full well know its ethically WRONG); or they are kept out of the loop and lied to.

      the ONLY way laws like this will get overturned is when it 'hits home' with someone in a position of power. and enough times to really make the news and make people think 'hmmm, this has some implications to NON terrorist people'.

      if some person in power were to have THEIR emails and phonecalls tapped and some juicy bits were to leak out, maybe THEN people would take notice that swinging an axe around will sooner or later start harming innocent people.

      privacy is like air (or it should be): air is a right to ALL human beings, even the evil ones. I wish privacy was valued as much as the things that physically keep us alive.

      but as usual, society is decades behind when it comes to finding ETHICAL uses for technology.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by sm62704 ( 957197 )
      Not only that, they already have immunity. The telcom can be taken to court, found guilty, ordered to pay a huge fine and its CEO sentenced to years in prison, then the President simply pardons them with the stroke of a pen. No fine, no imprisonment.

      Ford pardoned Nixon.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Sponge Bath ( 413667 )

        Ford pardoned Nixon.

        During the last 7 and 1/2 years, the mention of Nixon has really lost its impact.
        Only Bush 2 could make Nixon look like a saintly statesman.

        • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

          by Weezul ( 52464 )
          Two points : Nixon was a statesman at least in international affairs. Nixon resigned.
  • Call Barack Obama (Score:5, Informative)

    by Protonk ( 599901 ) on Thursday June 19, 2008 @02:43PM (#23863031) Homepage
    He can put a stop to this.

    866-675-2008 option 6, if you don't get a person then, press 0. If you get a voicemail, leave a message, then call back and dial 0 during the voicemail prompt to get a human.

    Let them know:
    -You are a progressive.
    -Civil lawsuits are the ONLY remaining route to disclosure for the spying the bush administration perpetrated on americans.
    -What the telecommunications companies did was ILLEGAL.
    -He should call Hoyer and Pelosi to stop this RIGHT NOW. One phone call from the head of the democratic party should kill this nonsense.

    If you have donated in the past, let them know that you will seek to have your donations returned if he does not speak out on this issue. If you haven't, let them know that you will refuse to donate or organize in the future if he refuses to take the lead on this issue.

    The first step to making democrats strong on national security is standing up to republicans.
    • by Hatta ( 162192 )
      I thought Howard Dean was the head of the Democratic party.
    • by The Warlock ( 701535 ) on Thursday June 19, 2008 @02:48PM (#23863129)
      Also, if this bill gets to the Senate, keep your eye on how Obama and McCain decide to vote on it. I know I will.
      • by stinerman ( 812158 ) on Thursday June 19, 2008 @02:50PM (#23863185)
        Very likely neither will vote on the bill because they will be out campaigning.
        • Re:Call Barack Obama (Score:4, Informative)

          by Deanalator ( 806515 ) <pierce403@gmail.com> on Thursday June 19, 2008 @04:05PM (#23864569) Homepage
          Bullshit. I had the chance to talk with Barack at a recent fund raiser in Portland, and made sure to specifically bring up the issues of telecom immunity and network neutrality.

          A MAJOR part of his plan to overhaul the way the government works relies on transparency via increased network infrastructure. If companies are allowed to get away with stuff like this, it greatly threatens that plan.

          Look at how he has used the internet to promote his message, and tell me again that he will be too busy to keep it free.

          I think that Barack, more than anyone else in the senate, has a vested interest in blocking telecom immunity. Unfortunately he is in the minority there, and I only hope the house is able to keep this bill down.
      • by Protonk ( 599901 )

        Also, if this bill gets to the Senate, keep your eye on how Obama and McCain decide to vote on it. I know I will.
        If it makes it to the senate, it won't matter. Obama will vote against, McCain for. Unless someone filibusters it, it will pass.
      • by InvisblePinkUnicorn ( 1126837 ) on Thursday June 19, 2008 @03:18PM (#23863687)
        How a candidate acts when it is politically profitable is no indication of how they will act when they have all the power they want.
    • by Archangel Michael ( 180766 ) on Thursday June 19, 2008 @02:51PM (#23863201) Journal
      This isn't really about "progressive" (left) or conservative (right) politics.

      This is about freedom (liberty). Progressives tend to take from people when it is expedient, as does conservatives. Which is why people ought to vote libertarian where governmental taking is just plain frowned upon.
      • by Protonk ( 599901 ) on Thursday June 19, 2008 @02:57PM (#23863307) Homepage

        This isn't really about "progressive" (left) or conservative (right) politics.

        This is about freedom (liberty). Progressives tend to take from people when it is expedient, as does conservatives. Which is why people ought to vote libertarian where governmental taking is just plain frowned upon.
        sure, but you pick your pressure point. voting for a third party candidate in a first past the post election system is pointless. That isn't a crack on the libertarians, but the political system doesn't provide power to third parties (in the US). there is a REASON why the French have dozens of parties and the US has only two major parties, it isn't because the french dig pluralism more.

        Call Barack Obama's office tonight.
        • by Archangel Michael ( 180766 ) on Thursday June 19, 2008 @03:31PM (#23863903) Journal
          Voting for the person/party that represents my views the best is never pointless. If you suggest that voting 3rd party is pointless because they'll never win, is much like saying developing Linux Kernal in 2001 when Linus released version was pointless because it couldn't compete with Windows or Mac.

          It is only pointless, until it is not. Then it becomes something bigger than most imagined it could in the beginning.

          Besides, if you want to keep voting for the same old same old two parties, and expect things to actually change, then you're insane.

          People want real change this year, and neither Obama nor McCain offer it, not really. Both offer more of the same crap we've had since 88. I'm also a tad disillusioned by Barr winning the (L) ticket.

          That being said, I can never vote for people willing to take from others for political expediency, or for whatever "greater/common good" they think is important.

          • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

            by Protonk ( 599901 )
            Look. If you want you vote to reflect your personal preference, then vote for whomever you feel like. What I'm saying is that the election system in the US, which awards a seat in a representative body (or executive body) on a winner take all basis.

            In those kinds of elections (first past the post), a third party doesn't have a chance to impact major policy unless they represent >30% of the electorate.

            It is just a fact of the political system. A proportional representation system would reward third par
            • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

              Actually, we did. It was over turned with a Constitutional Ammendment, which limited the total number of US Reps to the number we have today.

              Originally it was one rep per 30,000 people. Currently the reps represent over 20 times that number. I'd wager that we had the number of reps needed to provide 30K to 1 representation we'd have more parties.

              Additionally the Constitution provides that each State sets the rules for setting the Elector for President. The States have decided winner take all, but it doesn't
    • by bsDaemon ( 87307 ) on Thursday June 19, 2008 @03:12PM (#23863567)
      Don't you think that it might send a bigger message if, for example, Obama could come to the floor with a list and/or recordings of say, 15-20000 phone calls saying that they're switching parties to vote for him because of bullshit legislation like this?

      Playing to your own base is one thing. Playing to the enemy by showing you're up in their base, stealing all their votes is quite another -- and that's the sort of show stopper.

      Who says you even have to actually be a Republican. Just call and say you're switching parities because of it. Then call your legislator and say the same.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      The usual advice on influencing politicians is not to threaten them. I heard from one of my state legislators that he tuned out $CAUSE activists because all they ever did was criticize and threaten, never acknowledging when he met them halfway and never putting their volunteer time where their mouths were.

      >you will refuse to donate or organize in the future if he refuses to take the lead on this issue.

      And if you do, save the nuclear threats for nuclear attacks. This issue shouldn't be a dealbreaker when
    • by Hyppy ( 74366 ) on Thursday June 19, 2008 @03:36PM (#23863983)
      I just called my congresswoman. I spent about 10 minutes speaking to her staffer and then her, letting them know that I opposed the new "compromise" bill.

      Mentioning that I served 42 months in Iraq/Afghanistan probably got me the "in" to talk to her, but every voice needs to be heard.
  • by khasim ( 1285 ) <brandioch.conner@gmail.com> on Thursday June 19, 2008 @02:44PM (#23863053)
    http://clerk.house.gov/member_info/mcapdir.html [house.gov]

    Email does NOT have the same impact as a phone call.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward
      AC here. I called. Took but two minutes.

      If you need a 'form' for your call, here's what I wrote in preparation:

      Honorable Congress(person) (X):

      I am a constituent (and supporter?) who lives in (your city). I am calling to urge you to vote 'NO' tomorrow on the so-called 'FISA Compromise Bill.'

      Any Bill that grants retroactive immunity to the Telecoms is a validation of George W. Bush's attempts to circumvent the law & the 4th Amendment. Please ensure that the law is upheld, and that Americans are given
    • I made my call. (Score:3, Informative)

      by khasim ( 1285 )
      McDermott, Jim WA 7th 225-3106

      The woman who answered the phone says that he is against retroactive immunity.

      That's one vote against it.
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by Steeltalon ( 734391 )
      I called my rep as soon as I saw the article on CNN... Of course, my Rep happens to be Hoyer.

      The staffer was polite, but he tried to explain to me that this isn't "blanket immunity" since they have to go to the courts. I politely explained that it didn't make any sense since Bush had already admitted telling them to do it, that pretty much was blanket immunity right there.

      He forwarded my contact information on to Representative Hoyer, but since he "negotiated" this deal, I doubt that he's going to back do
  • How does this compare to the law in Sweden?

    Doesn't it simply rubber stamp the domestic spying, that has been done along with legalising it in the future?
  • ... if they get immunity and the public never finds out what happened, the only other logical next step is to convince everyone I know not to get an iPhone.
    Problems like this aren't limited to a single carrier. Boycotting Apple hardware isn't going to get you very far in the defense of civil liberties.
    • What the hell are you babeling about?

      Boycotting Apple (et al), would make Apple and other like-companies pay attention and probably be a little less likely to follow their trend. Once large companies start showing a decline in revenue, and thus cant afford to buy the next congressman, the congressman pays attention, etc, etc... etc.

      Granted it would take a lot of boycotting, and some girlcotting too, but... the idea still works...
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by bsDaemon ( 87307 )
      ATT is one of the companies at the center of this whole thing. The iPhone is pretty much the only compelling reason to switch to ATT, and convincing people that its actually a piece of crap and that can do better is probably easier than trying to explain to them why this legislation is bad.
  • by jollyreaper ( 513215 ) on Thursday June 19, 2008 @02:52PM (#23863215)
    Don't worry about breaking the law. As Nixon said, "If the President does it, it's legal."

    In my ideal world, the people who make and enforce the rules would be held to a higher standard than the proles who merely have to follow the rules. It's bad enough when the infraction is minor like a cop doing 20 over the speed limit but when we're talking about the crimes committed in this case, it's the sort of thing that erodes faith in our very society.

    I know there are people who say that there shouldn't be trials after Obama is elected, that it would be divisive and bad for the nation. Those people can kindly go fuck themselves. That same logic was used to praise Ford for not investigating Nixon. That same logic was used to praise Clinton for not seriously investigating the scandals of the Reagan and Bush administrations. All this did was let the same shit-weasels get back into positions of power the next time a Republican slithered into office. No. As a nation, we need hearings, we need trials. Bush and his henchmen need to answer for their crimes. A standard needs to be set in stone: we are a nation of laws, not men, and no man is above the law. Even Presidents will be forced to account for their actions and pay for their sins.

    This will be part of our process for reengaging with the world. We've burned a shitload of bridges over the past eight years. When everyone can see an American President sitting in jail for his crimes, they'll know that justice has returned.
    • by Notquitecajun ( 1073646 ) on Thursday June 19, 2008 @03:01PM (#23863395)
      If you applied your standard across the board, I imagine we would have to arrest almost every high-level politician in the US. Don't limit your vitriol to the Republicans. We could name plenty of garbage that FDR, Kennedy, LBJ, Carter, and Clinton pulled while in office and go around and around about that. I do agree with you about accountability, however, there is always a certain amount of balance that needs to be placed in the Presidency where the position gets a LOT of power as well. We have a unique system that typically works well and breaks down at times. Deal with it.
      • by sconeu ( 64226 ) on Thursday June 19, 2008 @03:08PM (#23863517) Homepage Journal
        Just to be pedantic, it would have been damned difficult to indict Kennedy after his term, since he was dead.
      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        The death of a democracy starts the moment its people no longer care enough to fight against the erosion of civil liberties. Looking back over the years, it's clear that the American people no longer have the will to defend any of the rights that are the cornerstone of this nation and that is really sad, watching an entire civilization slowly commit suicide like that...
    • by BobMcD ( 601576 ) on Thursday June 19, 2008 @03:10PM (#23863543)
      As an aside, did you notice that the bill also makes it illegal to even INVESTIGATE what happened?
  • Do we know that the administration was listening in on calls between two people in the US? All I see in these arguments are statements about "domestic" wiretapping when the actual discussion should be covering calls between an American citizen and someone on a watch list who NEEDS his calls tapped, and the Bush admin just didn't file the proper paperwork. Yeah, maybe it's more sinister than that, but all I'm seeing is a bunch of philosophical/theoretical arguments and NO real-world situations that even al
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      I agree I have not seen anything talking about US citizen to US citizen calls. For example if I were to call my mother in Boston from New York. As for the US government spying on a call from the US to Afghanistan...well I think that is fair game because that call would be on other countries networks also, for example, Briton, Germany, Turkey, Iran, and then Afghanistan. So you have no guarantee at all that none of those countries would not be listening in also.
    • by sm62704 ( 957197 ) on Thursday June 19, 2008 @03:07PM (#23863497) Journal
      the actual discussion should be covering calls between an American citizen and someone on a watch list who NEEDS his calls tapped

      If someone NEEDS his calls tapped, law enforcement can get a warrant. That's how it's supposed to work here.

      Stop fearing the terrorists; they want you to be afraid, but they're toothless. Bush's senseless war in Iraq has killed more Amerricans than all the terrorists this century. Meanwile ten times as many people die every year on American highways. IMO anybody who drives an SUV needs to be on a watch list and have his phone tapped; (s)he's far more of a danger to me than any Muslim terrorist.

      And some of that "homeland security" money needs to go to guard rails!
    • by demachina ( 71715 ) on Thursday June 19, 2008 @03:42PM (#23864127)
      The issue is that as soon as they took the program out from under the supervision of the FISA court it became nearly impossible for anyone to figure out who they were spying on or how sweeping and abusive the program became. It doesn't really matter if they were only listening to calls of foreign nationals, once they bypassed the courts they could spy on anyone they felt like and probably did. They violated the Constitution by spying on people without a warrant, period. When you let your government spy on you without court supervision, its really easy for your government to collect dirt on opponents to discredit and blackmail them, to snuff out dissent, to win elections, and then your representative Democracy is pretty much gone. We've been there before. Nixon and Hoover very nearly destroyed our Republic in the 60's and 70's which is why FISA was created.

      By circumventing FISA the Bush administration was turning the clock back to a time when our government was abusively spying on people for no good reason. Since abuse was happening before FISA was created chances are its occurring now that FISA has been gutted. Chances are its even worse this time around since digital communications and computers make it possible to eavesdrop on a much larger scale than you could in 1968. Back then agents actually had to listen to and read everything. Now computers can sift through everything and kick out every email or phone call which has a keyword of interest.

      I'm not sure I'm really that concerned about granting immunity to the telecoms. When the NSA and the President told them to do it, it took extraordinary balls to say no. Qwest did and their CEO ended up in prison partially because of his refusal to play ball with them. Qwest lost a big classified government contract because of their refusal to participate, their stock tanked and their CEO was charged for misleading shareholders because he couldn't talk about all this classified blackmail.

      I'd be glad to let the telecoms go, as long as the people in the government who told them to do it go to jail, the people at the not, not the people in the middle or at the bottom. Throwing the telecoms in jails is about like throwing the privates in Abu Graib in jail. Its become clear the torture they were doing at Abu Graib and Gitmo was ordered by the highest levels of the Bush administration, especially Cheney and Addington. They should be going to jail, not the flunkies who did what their government ordered them to do in the panic post 9/11.
  • The issue of 'wiretapping' the Internet seems to be a bit like gun control. If you make it hard to legally own a gun, you make it harder for innocents to protect themselves from criminals.

    Basically, with encryption technology being what it is and open source being what it is, it is possible for those who want to conceal their data from the government. Thus, they will.

    So, really, where does this put us?

    1) Stupid criminals may get caught.
    2) Innocents may get falsely IDed through whatever automated filtering
  • by Sir_Eptishous ( 873977 ) on Thursday June 19, 2008 @02:57PM (#23863313)
    They will pass it, and the majority of Americans will go blissfully along, acting like everything is fine. The really interesting thing here, and we all know this, is that these tools for control that have been put in place in the last 8 years are mainly for control of the American people, not for any sort of "war on terror" or protecting us from Al-Qaida. The bigger lies are more easily believed. Keep waiving that flag!
  • A bit sensational (Score:4, Interesting)

    by stinerman ( 812158 ) on Thursday June 19, 2008 @03:01PM (#23863403)
    Technically speaking, the bill doesn't provide for amnesty. What that bill does do is require telcos to provide the letters the Bush administration gave them that said the programs were legal. Essentially, if the telcos can prove that Bush et al. told them this was legal, they get off the hook.

    So I suppose if the executive branch told your company it was legal to do anything, you'll never be held accountable for your actions.

    That's a pretty dangerous precedent. Why doesn't Bush let our oil companies know it's legal to drill in ANWR? He can give them the CYA letter and off they go.
  • by shawnmchorse ( 442605 ) on Thursday June 19, 2008 @03:08PM (#23863513) Homepage
    Appropriate info copied from DailyKos:

    Call Barack Obama and urge him to make a public statement reiterating his opposition to telco amnesty. His opposition could kill this deal: Phone (202) 224-2854, Fax (202) 228-4260

    Call Steny Hoyer and tell him this is a bad deal: Phone (202) 225-4131, Fax (202) 225-4300

    Call Nancy Pelosi and urge her to pull the bill from the House schedule: Phone (202) 225-4965, Fax (202) 225-8259

    Call your representative [congress.org] and tell them to vote no on the FISA rewrite tomorrow.
  • by corsec67 ( 627446 ) on Thursday June 19, 2008 @03:09PM (#23863523) Homepage Journal
    This law is an Ex Post Facto [wikipedia.org] law, making what was an illegal act legal, so if this law passes, it should be unconstitutional as per Article 1 Section 9 [wikipedia.org] of the Constitution.

    Note that judges have somehow taken that "No bill of attainder or ex post facto Law shall be passed." sentence to mean that ex post facto laws that make the punishment worse are unconstitutional, but that isn't what the constitution says. Maybe that is one of those hidden things like in amendment 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 9, 10
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by servognome ( 738846 )
      This is amnesty, not ex post facto. Like a witness receiving immunity for testimony, the telcos receive immunity for producing the paperwork from the President authorizing the program.
    • by stinerman ( 812158 ) on Thursday June 19, 2008 @03:18PM (#23863685)
      Granted you have a right to your interpretation of the Constitution, but arguing that the SCOTUS made a "wrong" interpretation is a non-starter.

      The SCOTUS can't possibly be wrong in their interpretation because their interpretations are infallible.

      Arguing that the constitution says something, but that the SCOTUS got it wrong is essentially an exercise in intellectual masturbation. In practice, the Constitution says whatever the SCOTUS says it says.
  • by tjstork ( 137384 ) <todd.bandrowskyNO@SPAMgmail.com> on Thursday June 19, 2008 @03:16PM (#23863641) Homepage Journal
    Haven't even bothered to notice that Chris Dodd has slipped a provision into the housing bill that requires all internet businesses and payment providers to report their transactions to the IRS.

    just all financial transactions [freedomworks.org]

    So you guys are all worrying about Bush wiretapping a few conversations so you can sue AT&T, while the government just grabbed all the financial data.

    Way to go Democrats! You guys are the best!
    • So you guys are all worrying about Bush wiretapping a few conversations so you can sue AT&T, while the government just grabbed all the financial data.

      I can't speak for Democrats, particularly since I haven't officially abandoned the smoking wreckage of the Republican party by changing my registration yet. However, since I have been worried about Bush and the evolving disaster of a presidency his administration has inflicted on the nation for the last 8 years, perhaps I'm a suitable proxy.

      First off -- ho
  • This vote, the recent one in Sweden, wiretapping, surveillance, censorship; governments across the western world basically totally ignoring long held principles for individual rights and freedoms. They keep doing it, and nothing seems to be able to stop it.

    I'm led more and more to the conclusion that our system of democracy isn't working anymore. I don't know why, and I'm pretty sure it did work before. Governments usen't be able to get away with even proposing this nonsense. Whatever we had that worked before doesn't seem to be there anymore.

    Don't get me wrong now. I still believe in democracy, at least I think I do. Is the kind I believe in the one we actually have, or ever had? I vote. I see others voting. But I still see a disconnect between the actions of government and the will of the people. What has gone wrong? Is it just my vision that's in error here?

    Is the fact that this recent shift occurred contemporaneously with the rise of the internet a coincidence? Is it just fallout from 9/11? Or something more? Is it the media? The corporations? The fall of communism? Globalisation? Or is it just the fact that we have indeed reached true democracy, and the currently evolving system of oppression is in fact what the people truly want?

    I think there's a problem with our democracy. Something is broken, and I don't know what it is. The end result is that democracy is not working the way it once did. Maybe I'm just a fool raised on too many fairy tales about the way things should work. I'd like to think that, but I do perceive the shifts in our society, laws, and governments to be very real. Either the west is collectively shifting into some other system of government, or the very concept of democracy is itself undergoing some kind of phase change.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by BitHive ( 578094 )
      Access to cheap energy for the last 150 years has allowed our population to explode while creating economies that can grow despite mass complacency, ignorance, and greed. When faced with difficult decisions there is a large contingent of people who have never learned the value of taking a principled stance ahead of time, so they simply evaluate every issue as it relates to themselves, and if no one ever raises the issues, so much the better.
    • by CodeBuster ( 516420 ) on Thursday June 19, 2008 @05:16PM (#23865775)

      Whatever we had that worked before doesn't seem to be there anymore.
      A functioning democracy depends upon a well informed and educated citizenry engaging amongst themselves and with the government in the common communications space in equal exchanges of ideas, critiques, and debate. That is what is most lacking from our democracy today and among the main reasons why our system is not now functioning as it was originally intended. For a more complete and insightful explanation I recommend Al Gore's new book, The Assault on Reason [amazon.com], where the case is made for what is wrong and how we can go about restoring the vigor of our democracy and preserving it for the generations yet to come.
  • by Flamefly ( 816285 ) on Thursday June 19, 2008 @03:39PM (#23864043)
    The most scary part of this bill is it allows a person, or company to entirely avoid legal ramifications by simply stating "I was only following orders."
    If that argument is a credible one in America, then the country is more morally bankrupt then I ever imagined.
  • by GroeFaZ ( 850443 ) on Thursday June 19, 2008 @03:41PM (#23864109)
    if they get immunity and the public never finds out what happened, the only other logical next step is to convince everyone I know not to get an iPhone.

    Verily! That will show The Man who's boss!

"All the people are so happy now, their heads are caving in. I'm glad they are a snowman with protective rubber skin" -- They Might Be Giants

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