Telco Immunity Goes To Full Debate 154
Dr. Eggman notes an Ars Technica analysis of the firefight that is the current Congressional debate over granting retrospective immunity to telecoms that helped the NSA spy on citizens without warrants. A Republican cloture motion, which would have blocked any further attempts to remove the retroactive immunity provision, has failed. This controversial portion of the Senate intelligence committee surveillance bill may now be examined in full debate. At the same time, a second cloture motion — filed by Congressional Democrats in an effort to force immediate vote on a 30 day extension to the Protect America Act — also failed to pass. The Protect America Act has been criticized for broadly expanding federal surveillance powers while diminishing judicial oversight. While the failure of this second cloture motion means the Protect America Act might expire, a vote tomorrow on a similar motion in the House will likely bring the issue back into the Senate in time. It seems, according to the article, that both parties feel that imminent expiration of the Protect America Act is a disaster for intelligence gathering, and each side blames the other as progress grinds to a halt."
Hmm (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Hmm (Score:4, Insightful)
Perhaps it's time to remind your representatives that you want some ROI here. My constitutional rights are very expensive. If their abuse of my rights does not land bin laden in jail, or bolster the free world by some provably huge fscking margin, then I'm going to want to see rolling heads. So far... I'm thinking of rolling heads (figuratively speaking... say hello to the nice FBI agents)
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Uhh? people have less rights - what more do you want? - and, by virtue of all the hoo-hah (tm) "omg, there's a terrorist behind you", people are afraid. I seem to recall someone mentioning that a fearful electorate is easier to control. So, there you have it - mission accomplished.
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Perhaps it's time to remind your representatives that you want some ROI here. Do you seriously believe any such results would be released legally within the public domain? More likely to be a topic of discussion in closed testimony before Congress.
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If the absence of a negative outcome is proof to you, I'll be sending you a bill shortly for my hard work preventing you from getting cancer.
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As it happens, the effectiveness of intelligence against terrorists can be measured objectively by simply enumerating the terrorists caught, bombs or other means of terror confiscated, or nefarious schemes exposed using information gathered from said intelligence. So, anyone got any statistics on those ?
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Sounds like the sort of thing that would give government an incentive to capture a bunch of people and lock them up without holding trials, counting them all as terrorists. Good thing we have something called habeas corpus, so that can never happen here.
Oh, wait...
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Mr. Spoonman, I would like to buy your rock....
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Lisa: That's spacious reasoning, Dad.
Homer: Thank you, dear.
Lisa: By your logic I could claim that this rock keeps tigers away.
Homer: Oh, how does it work?
Lisa: It doesn't work.
Homer: Uh-huh.
Lisa: It's just a stupid rock.
Homer: Uh-huh.
Lisa: But I don't see any tigers around, do you?
[Homer thinks of this, then pulls out some money]
Homer: Lisa, I want to buy your rock.
[Lisa refuses at first, then takes the exchange]
source [snpp.com]
-uso.
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Because there is no -1: Specious moderation.
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Maybe not by you, but the Security Theater Lobbyists got 'em for a song.
Just think about that the next time you fly and you submit to giving up your 4th & 5th amendments at the shoe-removal/pat-down/keys-in-the-cup portal.
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Funny (Score:2, Interesting)
Granting immunity is the domain of the Judicial branch.
Nowhere in here is the Legislative branch involved.
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Here in Illinois we had just such a situation a few years ago. http://www.reason.com/news/show/36162.html [reason.com]
To summarize, a homeowner shot a burglar that was in his home. The homeowner was not charged with the shooting as it was deemed to be in self-defense, but was charged for violating the town's ban on handguns. A major bruhaha ensued.
The state legislature passed a law giving people charged with violating a local government's
Re:Hmm (Score:5, Informative)
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This court has struck down time and time again in any case where a person who brings the lawsuit cannot demonstrate that they have been harmed (mostly on controversial cases that they don't want to deal with).
And since the warrantless wiretaps were done in secret and there is no chance that you can find out whether or not your phone was tapped, and thus, you would have no standing in the eyes of this Supreme Court. Th
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Protect America Act... (Score:5, Insightful)
If it looks like a duck and quacks like a duck, stop calling it a peacock. Yes, I know it will never happen. One can fantasize.
It's Orwellian is what it is (Score:4, Insightful)
But it got through. Why? Because in a time of national panic (9/11) you wouldn't vote against an act called the Patriot act would you? You are a patriot aren't you?
Jingoism and marketing need to die.
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My personal favorite:
"Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996" (aka Welfare reform). Sounds better than, say the "Throw Mom & Kids Off the Dole Act of 1996".
More surveillance and less oversight? (Score:2)
Who could vote no?
And after it takes effect, who would dare to vote no?
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Great (Score:1)
Retroactive immunity (Score:1)
Not surprising (Score:3, Interesting)
As those cowardly French say: eqality, liberty, and fraternity...
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It's not that each person is evil (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm not saying stupidity is an excuse. I'm just saying that the supposed "inherent evil" that people want to believe politicians all possess isn't the problem. The problem is political ignorance and an extreme distance from reality that accompanies the higher eschelons of power.
This is also, I would imagine, why the fore-fathers imagined a country run by the stronger states, not controlled by a stronger federal government. Keep the power closer to the people, at lower levels, and the reality is much harder to miss.
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It is fair to say that my experience of the world does not provide much support for this notion.
What's that quote? (Score:2)
But the thing is that Congress-critters are a lot smarter than you think. Like most people (not all), they have their own self interest at heart. They may want to protect their business constituents, that's all. And gosh, you don't want someone with all that money to be donating it to someone that may not be able to help in the next election, do you?
Real peace at last? (Score:3, Interesting)
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Mind you, not by establishing liberty abroad, but by redefining freedom at home.
It might take some time but... (Score:4, Funny)
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Radicals (Score:5, Interesting)
I liked the comment [gpo.gov] by Sen. Bond (R-Mo.) that failure to give telecom providers retroactive immunity for any crimes they may have committed would be
He is saying -- he is actually saying -- that Congress has to prevent its own laws from being applied to a corporation, because if the courts are allowed to proceed with civil lawsuits, angry mobs of disaffected citizens will storm the corporate headquarters of AT&T and Verizon and burn them to the ground because they oppose intelligence gathering. We must circumvent the legal process to soothe the hordes of Americans who are furious at the NSA. This is surely the most bizarre panem-et-circenses ever.
Or maybe he's saying Al Qaeda sleeper cells will launch attacks on key NOCs for our internet backbone... the only thing holding them back is they're waiting for word to come that a civil lawsuit has been filed against the owning corporation and depositions have been submitted and discovery is proceeding, Allahu Akbar!
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Re:Radicals (Score:4, Funny)
Well, to be fair, the only proven way to stop a horde of radicals with pitchforks and torches is to calmly explain to them that the criminals spying on them paid millions of dollars to politicians who then let them off the hook. "You mean we have no legal recourse against those who wronged us?" the mob will say. "Well, there's hardly any point to physical retaliation unless it can be accompanied by lengthy judicial review of an accompanying civil lawsuit!"
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GWB: "We must allow domestic spying immediately in order to prevent another 9/11."
GWB (2 weeks later): "I will veto any domestic spying legislation that doesn't retroactively protect the telcos."
In other words, protecting the telcos (retroactively!) is more important than preventing another 9/11.
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Slogan (Score:5, Funny)
Capitulation Happens (Score:4, Insightful)
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Right and you vote in Republicans to lower taxes and shrink government. It's all good in theory, but in practice never quite turns out that way. The only difference between the two groups is that they think there is differences between them.
PAA should just die (Score:2)
The PAA and the attempt to include retroactive immunity is a sham to destroy the constitution. If passed, then it would set a precedent that would allow any corporation to get immunity for their actions. Pure fascism.
Examples would be pollution cleanup, consumer poisoning, and investment fraud. The mess that would result would actually destroy the corpora
Gridlock causing Protect America Act to expire... (Score:2)
Don't be to distracted by the retroactive immunity (Score:4, Informative)
The *real bill* (Score:4, Interesting)
We've just been pussy-footing around for the past 7 years. GWB is very nearly a King already, between Signing Statements and Executive Privilege. The mechanisms of tyranny are in place. The checks and balances of government are broken. So the question becomes, "Do you trust GWB?" as well as, "Do you trust the next President?"
Name a spade a spade, and maybe people will finally wake up to the slippery slope we've been sliding down.
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Fall on sword (Score:3, Insightful)
The hypocrisy of Congress cannot by overestimated. Without the moral compass that principles provide, there will always be situations where expediency is unclear.
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The Republicans want spying. It's popular with their constituents, who have been led to believe that the President^H^H^H^HCommander in Chief^H^H^H^HGod's Anointed One can direct "patriotic corporate citizens" to do anything he wants (and declare them immune from prosecution later).
Democrats, with the exception of a few yahoos, pretty much want the rule of law to be upheld. As do many of their civil libertarian supporters. They don't want widespread domestic survei
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Leaning on Ds won't work very much. They're just counting votes. Likewise the Rs. Without pricinples, all is expediency.
Good for the Goose... (Score:2)
If the government wants to be able to listen in on all my communications, then I want to listen in on all of theirs. I want to know what my employees are doing.
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Would you rather have a shovel, or a backhoe with busted hydraulics? I don't give a damn what tools they want if they can't figure out how to use the ones they currently have.
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I want the tools, a toolbox, a mechanic to fix the busted tools, and people who are ready, able and willing to use them.
And use them in a way that still protects the legitimate privacy interests of citizens, while allowing intervention and interdiction of terrorist activities.
Again, BOTH can and must be done. I don't care who it is that takes up residence or gets "hired" to work on either end of Pennsylvania Avenue, it still has to be done.
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It's even worse than that. All the wiretapping in the World is going to hurt you if the problem is that it's already too hard to pick signal out of noise in the intelligence we currently gather. If you start also sifting through conversations between people so unsuspicious that you can't even get an after-the-fact FISA warrant to spy on either of them, does that add to the signal or does it add to the noise?
Re:Love It Or Hate It... (Score:5, Insightful)
Republican Senators are right now stonewalling and trying to prevent a one-month extension of the same legislation they insisted last year was vital, urgent, and necessary to prevent terrorist attacks in "days, not weeks [salon.com]." The President has said he would veto a one-month extension of this legislation that, last year, we supposedly needed to stop the terrorists from attacking America.
They are protesting a one-month extension so that people who aren't paying attention will pressure Democrats to cave in and give Republicans what they want. The Republicans are literally -- if you believe their own words -- exposing America to danger of terrorist attack as a political tactic to pass the legislation they want.
And what they want is retroactive immunity for corporations so that we, the people, have no legal recourse to discover whether those corporations cooperated with the Bush administration in breaking the law.
The tools are already available. They allow the NSA to spy, and they allow American corporations to assist that spying. It's just that the laws must be followed. They are not difficult to follow. And corporations already are immune from both civil and criminal consequences if they can just demonstrate that, even though they broke the law, they acted on a good-faith belief at the time that what they did was legal.
If you think this about whether we can monitor what the terrorists are talking about, you're wrong.
What are you smoking? (Score:4, Insightful)
So, you want to join the debate about this bill but you don't care what anyone thinks about the bill? Won't that sort of hinder your ability to engage in rational discourse?
See? The discussion is over the attempt to rid the bill of a provision protecting telecoms from the consequences of their past criminal activity. This has nothing whatsoever to do with monitoring terrorist activities, apart from the fact that certain members of congress (Jeff Sessions, for example) led by VP Cheney are willing to scuttle the bill if they can't get their friends a "get out of jial free" card.
Uh, what attacks would that be? And how does that have anything to do with the PAA which, as I just pointed out, has little or nothing to do with the telecom immunity? As far as I recall, all of the so-called "threats" that have been thwarted have turned out to be bogus, and none of them--none of them were found using the powers under PAA. So what's the connection?
Perhaps. But even if, as you say, "SOMETHING NEEDS TO BE DONE" a minute's thought leads to the conclusion that giving big corporations a blank check to violate our nations laws probably isn't it.
--MarkusQ
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No. But the topic is the telco immunity provision, not "intervening and interdicting terrorism" whatever that is.
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Then you should be agreeing strongly with the people who want the immunity provisions removed from the PAA, and objecting to the (mostly Republican) efforts to tie them together. Is this in fact your position?
The American position used to be "Give me Liberty or give me Death," and people who argued the position you appear to be advocating were
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If you are so interested in this whole "immunity" business with the telco, then direct your passions and energy at them. It's not my issue. Certainly if there is lawbreaking going on, then by all means go have it prosecuted.
My interest is allowing the government to surveil terrorists as a means to disrupt or completely stop thier plans. That is certainly not limited to telcos, or for that matter, any entity.
It is ironic you use the phrase "Give me Liberty or give me Death". Patrick Henry was a slave owner..
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Re:Love It Or Hate It... (Score:5, Insightful)
Maybe we should look at it the other way around. George Bush has been the only president in the 20th century to allow such a devastating foreign attack on our soil.
It might just be that the threat of terrorism isn't as serious as you seem to think.
But the most important argument against creating a "total surveillance society" in order to prevent terrorism is that there already is a very good legal system for allowing the kind of surveillance against terrorists that you seem to believe we need. It is called the FISA court and gives our government plenty of tools for fighting terrorism.
Finally, for me it comes down to this: Yesterday, we heard one GOP senator after another say that the telecoms did nothing wrong in allowing the government to eavesdrop, and the program is completely legal. Well then, why do they need immunity? Why not leave it up to our legal system and a jury of citizens to decide whether any laws were broken.
blcamp, I live in the shadow of Sears Tower. I'm as concerned about my wife and daughter as you are about your family. But as I've said before, I will take my chances with the terrorists, but leave my liberties intact.
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Utter Nonsense:
First World Trade Center Attack in 1993. President: Bill Clinton.
Pearl Harbor, 1941. President: Franklin Delano Roosevelt. (Yes, even then Hawaii was "our soil".)
Those were both a "foreign attack on our soil."
As I have said before, and I'll say again: BOTH can be done - both protecting our civil liberties AND preventing terrorist attacks. They are NOT mutually exclusive.
If you sacrifice either one without the other (EITHER WAY), we're in trouble.
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And yes, being 100% safe from terrorist attacks IS mutually exclusive with protecting our civil liberties.
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Hell, I'd like to see some evidence that 9/11 was a devastating attack on US soil in the 20th century. Sorry, but I just don't buy into your calendar-manufacturer conspiracy theories.
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Then you shouldn't support any immunity. If you want to look at by a case by case basis then haul each company into court, if they are found no guilty, they did no wrong, if they are then they should face the consequences. The reason they are asking for immunity, because they know what they did was illegal, but the people in these companies don't want to face j
Re:Love It Or Hate It... (Score:5, Insightful)
Seriously: Safeguard our liberties first then worry about security.
Security in the United States today is Security Theater. It's operatic in it's grandeur and stupidity.
5 Year olds and US senators on 'No Fly Lists'? Falafel stakeouts in San Fran looking for Iranian sleeper cells? The Secret Service strong-arming high school students for anti-war anti-bush speech? Calling the Bomb Squad on hot chilies, LED cartoon advertisements, and state owned traffic monitors? Arresting, Beating, Nearly Shooting & Killing innocent people because they act or look different?
There is no way I'm willing to give up any of *anyone's* liberties for that sort of buffoonery.
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You do know that because of the American meddling in their affairs over the last few decades that all of this is going on.
Yup. You done did this to yourselves.
Re:Love It Or Hate It... (Score:5, Insightful)
Nobody else is going to easily do it again even without all the "Patriot" bullshit. The 9/11 hijackers "ruined the market" for future hijackers.
Before 9/11 the "unwritten protocol" was - hijack announced, everyone meekly stays in their seats, nobody (mostly) gets hurt, negotiations start, hijackers get something, passengers get to go. Unless of course the hijackers were crazy enough to do El Al
After 9/11 hijackers WILL have a more difficult time with passengers and air crew, the cockpit doors are reinforced. Enough passengers will think "If I'm going to die anyway, I'm going to make sure that hijacker suffers first". If everyone just threw their shoes and stuff at the hijackers at the same time it will really hurt
In fact even _DURING_ 9/11, passengers on board one of those planes figured out what was happening, and one of the planes didn't hit the target.
You think most hijackers haven't figured that out? Only a few stupid ones (or mentally ill) have tried since 9/11. They have to move on to other methods if they want to crash into towers - charter/steal private planes etc.
The bulk of the new procedures like banning liquids and checking shoes is just to make the stupid sheeple feel safe.
The fact that the US Gov lies to its citizens regularly, and puts in laws that don't actually address the problem shows to me that the US Gov is a greater danger to US citizens than the "evil terrorists" are.
The 9/11 killed like 3K? And cost the USA how much?
In comparison the US Gov started a war in Iraq (based on _deceit_ ) and got how many killed? And cost the USA how much?
Not to mention the US Gov has been trampling over the "precious" US constitution which so many US citizens _allegedly_ value so much. They don't even bother to amend the constitution, they just ignore it or twist the interpretation so much.
The US people should serious consider who really is their biggest enemy.
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Argh this is something I hate when people do. The fact that the Iraq war was started on the basis of dishonest evidence has NOTHING TO DO WITH ANYTHING RELEVANT TO YOUR ARGUMENT
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Crude formula:
risk = impact * probability.
danger = badness * power.
You could be very bad (incompetent or evil) but if you have zero power, you're no danger.
You could be very powerful, but if you aren't bad, you're no danger to most people either (you might be a danger to the bad people...).
The US Gov has far far more power to ruin your life (and the life of any random p
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But what does Bush, or congress, or any of the laws they have passed have to do with it?
The reason we haven't been attacked is because after 9/11, I started shaving my crotch, and have kept it shaved ever since then.
Yes, I'm willing to do this to save American lives. I'm that cool.
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And remember what happened in the aftermath of Watergate?
Those who carried out the "abuses"... did they not get caught? I recall that even a sitting President had to step down, the offenses were so bad.
What would be so different now?
Obviously some reasonable controls would have to be put in place. Common-sense and all...
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Re:Love It Or Hate It... (Score:4, Insightful)
The trick to terror prevention is ensuring your safety without causing more damage than the terrorists could have. Alienating people is rarely a good idea because that only gets more people motivated to join the terrorists. Alienating entire countries is just as bad because they might not want to do business with you anymore (yes, that's possible; China is a viable alternative) and your economy suffers. Alienating your own people is even wore because it creates unrest and might even get som of them to help the terrorists out of the belief that the current government needs to be replaced.
Just finding terror suspects and killing them at any cost is quite likely to get the country into more trouble than just dealing with them like one did before the whole War on Terror(TM) started. The correct approach lies somewhere in the middle. One needs to be careful enough not to upset everyone but thorough enough to actually catch the dangerous plots. That requires more deliberation than zealotry.
Dammit People! (Score:3, Insightful)
What the hell is wrong with this country? Why is it that congress, and the populace aren't trying to solve the freakin' problem?
Why don't people ever stop and ask the question: Why are they so pissed off at us? What have we done to deserve this? If they did, people might actually discover that the terrorist, as well as much of the
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The problem is 90% of the stuff they do isn't designed to catch terrorists. It'd designed to look like they are doing something to catch terrorists. According to the latest penetration tests against the airports we are probably less safe than prior to 9/11. The mass influx of tech and new recruits to the screening process has dropped the catch rate from 85+% to as low as 65% in some places. You hav
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I'd love to, but no mod points. Perhaps someone else will oblige you.
Come to think of it, there's no "-1: fucking moron" category anyway, so it's moot.
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You sir, must have a very strange looking phallus. Tell me, is your penis semi-automatic or a revolver? And do you really have pearl-handled balls?