amul: (Default)
[personal profile] amul
I've been spending most of the day reading up on the wiretapping thing. As near as I can tell, and this is after about five solid hours of reading news articles and interviews, the argument goes something like this:

The Law: You cannot wiretap a US citizen without a written court order.

Nixon: Well, that's only for the FBI. I hereby empower a new branch of government to do the exact same thing as the old branches, but without all those messy legal complications.

The Law: Nice try, but you still can't tap a citizen's phone without an expressly written warrant stating who, why, when, and for how long.

Reagan: Well, what if I try to buy you off?

The Law: Then I'm just going to have to nominate a subcommittee to watch both of us and make sure we don't become corrupt.

Clinton: But it'd be really nice if we could.

The Law: See, there's this little thing called "due process." We kind of founded an entire country based on the fact that we didn't have it before.

George W: Fuck that noise. I'm just going to write a law that says I can.

The Law: You can't do that. You're not the Legislative Branch.

George W: ....and then I'm going to create another FBI-like group to watch over the FBI and the NSA and do all the things that my shiny new law lets them do.

The Law: No, you don't understand. You can't do that. That's an impeachable offense. It says so, right here.

George W: Nonsense, you get impeached for blowjobs, not crimes against the country. Hey, guys, look! I made a law!

Telecoms: Ooooooh. Pretty.


Pardon me if that version seems a little biased to you.

Date: 16 Feb 2006 10:50 (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
And there you hit it on the head exactly. Too many people beleive what they hear and the net effect is complacency to the way things are as opposed to what they should or could be. I wish i knew of an effective way to get people to collectively stand as one and oust those in power who prey upon them and the very country they have sworn to protect. But alas, I am not that smart. But I will not give up my voice, even if it is rendered moot by those around me that beleive differently.

Fact is the Republicans like to keep thier voting public stupid. It's why they continually slash funding for schools. They then prey on thier fears because they are too ignorant to think for themselves. Note, I chose the word ignorant which means uneducated. To use the word "stupid" would signify that they WANTED to be kept that way and that isn;t necessarily the case. Though I'm sure there are some peole that would fal into that category as well. but we'll give them the benefit of the doubt.

I'm waiting for that one day when the people of this country remember what freedom is and decide to take the power back from those who have collectively seized it from us. I pray it isn't until we have lost all power completely and have to resort to some form of revolution to invoke those changes which are supposed to be guaranteed to us by our forefathers.

Date: 16 Feb 2006 20:00 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] amul.livejournal.com
It's in the nature of humans to believe what they hear. The problem, or rather, the diffeence between now and the oil crisis of the 70s, is one of decentralization, not politicians.

In the 70s, citizens got their news and organized through three venues: Television, news radio, and newspapers. The newspapers were in collusion with the radio, and the TV reporters were friends with both of the other sets. What's more, their was a spirit of investigative journalism. Problems were reported and discussed.

By contrast, most people these days get their news from either lobbyist organizations masquerading as news programs, or blogs. We're too decentralized. Efforts to create National No Buy days, the most effective demonstration of consumer power, is hampered by the fact that we can't reach all of America.

I have a hard time imagining an era when the majority of our leaders were legitimately concerned more with good governance than their own fortunes, but the history books insist is was so.

Jon Stewart said something that really hit home for me, in that Daily Show bit that's going around. Alexander Hamiliton once challenged a man to a duel over matters of honor and governance. By contrast, our leaders accidentally shoot each other while hunting quailtards & hanging out with lobbyists.

As for the rest of your comment, it's no good setting up a soapbox on my LJ. I doubt there's anyone here who doesn't already agree with you.

Date: 20 Feb 2006 11:17 (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Touche and a good pooint at that. I take my exit, sir...

December 2025

S M T W T F S
 123456
78910111213
141516 17181920
212223 24252627
28293031   

Most Popular Tags

Page Summary

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated 21 January 2026 07:29
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios