Wednesday, March 05, 2008

Trashing The Constitution And Illegal Wiretaps Are Patriotic

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As much as I am against the death penalty I would gladly hang the next fucker I heard uttering the word "Patriotism."


FBI head: Give telcos immunity even if they acted in bad faith

At the heart of President Bush's plea to give telecommunications companies legal immunity is the contention that these companies were merely being patriotic corporate citizens when they facilitated the warrantless wiretapping of Americans.

FBI Director Robert Mueller undercut that argument Wednesday, telling Congress that the 'good faith' argument should have nothing to do with whether or not they are let off the hook in dozens of pending court cases.



"I would focus more on the downsides, substantial downsides, of not providing retroactive immunity as being the principal rational of the legislation, providing immunity," Mueller told the Senate Judiciary Committee.more


President Bush has previously said it was unfair the companies were being "sued for billions of dollars,"
Terribly unfair.

And here are a few more words from the Emperor man that swore to uphold the constitution.



Bush officials: Congress irrelevant on Iraq

The Bush administration says the 2002 congressional authorization to go to war in Iraq gives it the authority to conduct combat operations in Iraq and negotiate far-reaching agreements with the current Iraqi government without consulting Congress.

The assertion, jointly made Tuesday by U.S. Ambassador David Satterfield and Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Affairs Mary Beth Long, drew an incredulous reaction from Democrats on a Joint House committee during a hearing on future U.S. commitments to Iraq.

“It's the view of the administration that as long as there’s trouble in Iraq that you have authorization of this Congress to continue there in perpetuity and define trouble as you desire?” asked Rep. Gary Ackerman, D-N.Y.

“We have authorization to defend the national security of the United States against the continuing threat posed by Iraq,” Satterfield replied. “The situation in Iraq continues to present a threat to the United States.”

The Bush administration also feels it does not need to seek the authorization of Congress more



Patriotism has it's own label on this blog.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

I wonder if the constitution will just become a dusty old bit of paper, something to tell the kiddies about in history classes. HH