Government eavesdropping, a bad idea

President Bush won another political victory this week when the Senate approved the FISA bill he favored to permit government eavesdropping. Whether this was also a victory for the American people and their civil liberties during the war on terror cannot be assumed. Given this administration’s bull-in-the-china-shop record, I assume damage has been done to the Constitution in ways yet to be revealed.
Everybody sane knows that a proper balance needs to be struck between protecting civil liberties and protecting the nation against terrorist attack, but nobody sane could have confidence that Congress has pulled off this trick on the way to pleasing Mr. Bush. I have sadly come to the conclusion that anything that pleases this administration is presumptively a bad idea.
One of the most objectionable features is that the bill immunized telecommunications companies from lawsuits arising from eavesdropping done without legal authority. It is pretty clear that the president broke the law and he is now able to get his accomplices off the hook.
Even more amazing, he threatened to veto the bill if immunity were not granted.
Think of it: This bill was vital to national security, or so it was claimed, yet it was not so vital that it could stand alone without immunity being granted to the likes of AT&T and Verizon. An amendment to strip the bill of immunity lost on a 66-32 vote. Barack Obama voted for this amendment (John McCain was absent) but Mr. Obama joined the other sheep in the 69-28 vote approving the final bill with its odious gift to Mr. Bush’s partners in crime.
Late score from Major Political Football in Washington D.C.: Bush Corporate Pals 1, American People 0.


Posted Jul 12 2008, 02:43 AM by NewsAdmin

Comments

Toadsly wrote re: Government eavesdropping, a bad idea
on Sat, Jul 12 2008 12:58 AM

I am in despair. King George continues to subvert the Constitution as clueless Americans bemoan the price of gasoline and anxiously await the next installment of their favorite reality show.

Mr. Henry and other talented, dedicated, well-informed columnists expose the corruption taking place in Washington, but the majority of citizens refuse to read anything that’s longer than a few sentences if it’s not about sports or celebrities or cuddly animals.

China and India are emphasizing and mandating excellence in education to such an extent that each country has more honor students than we have pupils in our schools, and in a generation, they will be producing legions of competent, English-speaking graduates who will displace American workers for a fraction of their salaries.  

America’s future: Tiny houses; tiny cars; tiny salaries as the world’s largest debtor nation takes its rightful place in the Third World!