Why bother with a Constitution?
September 21, 2008 by Gee Carol · 4 Comments
More Power to you, Mr. President? Actually, we the American people do not think so. We believe we still have the constitution. According to Matt Berman, who writes “The Daily Muck” (9/15/08) at TPM Muckraker,
A new AP-National Constitution Center poll shows that a majority of Americans are opposed to giving more power to the President, even at the expense of national security or the economy. The poll shows that two-thirds of Americans are opposed to shifting the balance of government towards the executive, evidence of wide-ranging skepticism of the advances in executive power during the Bush years. The poll also found more of a split when Americans were asked if Congress should be awarded greater power in times of economic or national security hardships. (AP)
I am a Constitution Voter Campaign — At the ACLU Blog, , 9/15/08, Caroline Fredrickson on Salon Radio, on the Constitution Voter Campaign talks about how useful it would be to have the presidential candidates talk about Constitutional issues. To quote:
Today on Salon Radio with Glenn Greenwald is an interview with Caroline Fredrickson, Director of the ACLU’s Washington Legislative Office. Caroline talks about the launch of our new campaign, “I’m a Constitution Voter,” our effort to get candidates to discuss constitutional issues during this election season.
Our current president (OCP) started ignoring the Constitution by spying on Americans without a legal warrant some time ago. A great post illustrates an example. It cleverly and succinctly summarizes the new Barton Gellman material, with a “quick stock of some of the vitals,” the five main points of the revelations. It came from ACLU Blog, and was written by Amanda Simon (9/15/08): “Ashcroft Defends Constitution in Spying Clusterfrack. Happy Opposite Day!”
Our current president (OCP) had massive help from the private sector in shredding our Constitution privacy protection — At the website, Dandelion Salad [by Tom Burghardt, of Global Research, September 11, 2008], using another source, “Antifascist Calling…” comes the sordid story: “Multibillion “Homeland Security” Market: Telecoms Assist in NSA Spy Operations.” To quote:
What do the NSA’s warrantless wiretapping program and enterprising capitalist grifters have in common? Workarounds…and lots of them. The kind that aren’t covered by any law.
Two highly-disturbing reports by CNET and the London Review of Books describe how government intelligence agencies and niche telecom providers have teamed-up to subvert our privacy rights-while providing security agencies with real-time cell phone tracking capabilities.
. . . And with a swarming multitude of new companies crawling out of the woodwork to “service” the “homeland security” market, why its a snap. Firms such as ThorpeGlen, VASTech, Kommlabs, and Aqsacom all sell what CNET’s Chris Soghoian describes as “off-the-shelf data-mining solutions to government spies interested in analyzing mobile-phone calling records and real-time location information.”
Called “passive-probing” data mining, these companies are carving-out lucrative niche markets. Only there’s nothing “passive” about these intrusive operations undertaken in concert with a veritable army of state and corporate spooks.
. . . And there you have it. Niche telecom providers are the latest players in the West’s burgeoning “terrorism industry,” one that “keeps us safe” by destroying our privacy and our rights with hefty profits all around. Call it another seamless victory for the market’s “invisible hand” that clenches as it morphs into the state’s iron fist wrapped in American flags and blood-drenched corporate logos.
Congress has sometimes been complicit with OCP in the business of warrantless wiretapping, even when Democrats were in charge. To give them their due, however, they have held many hearings revealing some the truth, about the extent of damage to the principles of the Constitution’s Bill of Rights. For example, hats off to Senator Russ Feingold (D-WI) for recently holding this Judiciary subcommittee hearing: “Restoring the Rule of Law#.” It was this desire to dial back the executive power overreach that was Bush’s primary governing philosophy that led Sen. Russ Feingold (D-WI) to call together nearly a dozen experts Tuesday morning for the Judiciary subcommittee hearing. To quote:
Some Democrats — frustrated at banging their heads against a wall much of these last eight years, as they’ve watched George W. Bush run roughshod over the Constitution and the rule of law — are determined to return some semblance of order once the president leaves office next year.
The FBI became the agency charged with domestic intelligence gathering during the post-9/11 reorganization of the government’s intelligence and homeland security programs. But like other organizations in the executive branch, they have become less and less interested in civil liberties over the years. The following story is an illustration of what Congress is trying to do about that. “Mueller Grilled Over Claims New FBI Powers Amounts to Racial Profiling, More Spying,*” by Robert Chlala for The Public Record on September 19, 2008. To quote:
. . . what the new framework Mueller described would actually do is allow agents to begin “assessments” and surveillance without first obtaining factual evidence. Additionally, the guidelines would permit agents to use race and ethnicity as a factor for triggering investigations.
Despite the concerns raised during the hearings and pressure from civil rights groups, Attorney General Michael Mukasey plans on signing the guidelines into law on Oct. 1.
These guidelines represent only some of a series of changes in law enforcement set in place the last year, increasing the power of federal, state and local authorities. Other new policies include the proposal to eliminate restrictions on local and state law enforcement intelligence gathering, the recruitment of over 15,000 new informants, and the creation of local-level “fusion centers” that gather and monitor masses of criminal and non-criminal information on individuals.
While the FBI guidelines have not been released to the general public, several members of Congress and key staffers from the Judiciary Committees of the House and Senate pressed and received limited access to the draft. Department of Justice briefings and a speech by Attorney General Michael Mukasey in August also shed light on the topic.
Evidently protest is not protected in the copy of the Constitution carried by OCP. The Secret Service is under the Treasury Department in the executive branch. They are charged with the protection of the President and Vice President, as well as of the candidates currently running for those offices. They are very good at taking their marching orders from OCP, who ignores Constitutional rights under the guise of maintaining safety. This is a perfect example: “Secret Service order police to block McCain protesters*” was a post at The Raw Story by David Edwards and Muriel Kane on September 17. To quote:
. . . Leaders of the protest, which had been arranged and publicized by local unions and the Ohio Democratic Party, said that as many as several hundred people had been expected to attend, but police were not letting them through roadblocks surrounding the area.
ACLU Calls for Investigation into Civil Liberties Violations at RNC – During the Republican National Convention there were mass arrests, police raids on private homes and the detention of several journalists. This comes from my ACLU newsletter, and is a reminder why I am so grateful for the ACLU’s long battle to protect our rights under the Constitution. To quote:
“Attempts by law enforcement to squelch lawful political speech and stifle the press have no place in our democracy and are unacceptable,” said Anthony D. Romero, Executive Director of the ACLU. “Political conventions should be a showcase for free expression, not a venue for bullying and intimidation.”
The ACLU specifically called for an investigation into possible violations of the First and Fourth Amendments, including:
* The arrest of reporters trying to gather the news;
* The mass arrest of hundreds of peaceful protestors;
* The surveillance and subsequent raids on several activist groups and private homes; and
* The confiscation by law enforcement agents of constitutionally-protected private property.The ACLU affiliate office in Minnesota has assembled legal counsel for many of the reporters and peaceful protestors arrested at the protests and has also filed a lawsuit in federal court calling for the release of boxes of literature that were confiscated during raids.
Why bother with the Constitution at all when Homeland Security, under the cover of Keeping Us Safe, can intrude into Sesame Street, of all things? I give up. “Homeland Security, Sesame Style*,” by Jeff Dufour and Patrick Gavin, September 18, 2008, at DC Examiner To quote:
In a move that will make Bush administration detractors bring back those duct tape jokes again, the Department of Homeland Security has partnered up with the famous children’s show.
“We all want our children to feel safe in this world,” said Meryl Chertoff, wife of Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff, at a ceremony held at the John Tyler Elementary School to announce the partnership. “And who better to do that than our Sesame Street friends, Grover and Rosita!”
. . . As you can imagine, the partnership is aimed at children, and seeks to encourage family preparedness plans in the case of emergencies.
Hat Tip Key: Regular contributors of links to leads are “betmo*” and Jon#.
(Cross-posted at The Reaction.)
My “creativity and dreaming” post today is at Making Good Mondays.
Technorati tags: news news and politics politics bush constitution domestic surveillance fbi aclu bill of rights
Sphere: Related Contentstill don’t believe yet?
September 1, 2008 by Betmo · Leave a Comment
feds involved in raids on protesters
Understanding Your FBI
May 30, 2008 by Gee Carol · 3 Comments
The Federal Bureau of Investigation is 100 years old this year. To commemorate the occasion the website features the story of the violent death of Bonnie and Clyde, folks who came from my current neck of the woods. To quote the intro:
Bonnie and Clyde
Seventy-four years ago this month, the hunt for the most notorious crime couple in American history came to a violent end.
Prowling around the FBI website turned up some interesting finds. First was the page for the National Security Branch. National Security Letters made the news last March. Breaking news yesterday regarded the formation of a Northern Virginia Public Corruption/Government Fraud Task Force. Let’s hope that they can give us some protection before the big elections in the fall.
Around the Internet — The search term “fbi” returned 57,600,000 entries, including - of course - Wikipedia’s. I feel sure that the FBI has someone assigned to monitor the Wiki site to assure accuracy, given that they had 28,576 employees in 2004. The FBI seems almost ubiquitous. And we are told that every single one of them is out there to protect us in some way.
Just so you can’t say you didn’t know — The 2008 Republican National Convention is September 1-4, in Minneapolis-Saint Paul. — Depending whether you inside or outside of the fence at the Republican Convention, this news will hit you from opposite psychological directions.
Sphere: Related ContentScore one for the ACLU and the EFF!
May 7, 2008 by Dusty · Leave a Comment
H/T to EmptyWheel for reporting on this. Seems the ACLU and the fine folks at EFF (Electronic Frontier Foundation) have scored a victory against the FBI and their scurilous NSL’s (National Security Letter). From the EFF press release:
The FBI has withdrawn an unconstitutional national security letter (NSL) issued to the Internet Archive after a legal challenge from the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF). As the result of a settlement agreement, the FBI withdrew the NSL and agreed to the unsealing of the case, finally allowing the Archive’s founder to speak out for the first time about his battle against the record demand.
*snip*
The NSL included a gag order, prohibiting Kahle from discussing the letter and the legal issues it presented with the rest of the Archive’s Board of Directors or anyone else except his attorneys, who were also gagged. The gag also prevented the ACLU and EFF from discussing the NSL with members of Congress, even though an ACLU lawyer who represents the Archive recently testified at a congressional hearing about the FBI’s misuse of NSLs.
“This is a great victory for the Archive and also the Constitution,” said Melissa Goodman, staff attorney with the ACLU. “It appears that every time a national security letter recipient has challenged an NSL in court and forced the government to justify it, the government has ultimately withdrawn its demand for records. In the absence of much needed judicial oversight - and with recipients silenced and the public in the dark - there is nothing to stop the FBI from abusing its NSL power.”
Bless those patriotic folks that fight the good fight at the ACLU and the EFF. Without them, the snoopers would be getting away with murder…if they aren’t already.












