I am dismayed by Obama's endorsement of FISA.
Sen. Russ Feingold condemned the bill on the ground that it "fails to protect the privacy of law-abiding Americans at home" because "the government can still sweep up and keep the international communications of innocent Americans in the U.S. with no connection to suspected terrorists, with very few safeguards to protect against abuse of this power." Rep. Rush Holt -- who was actually denied time to speak by bill-supporter Silvestre Reyes only to be given time by bill-opponent John Conyers -- condemned the bill because it vests the power to decide who are the "bad guys" in the very people who do the spying.
So why is Obama supporting it?
It's either that he "chickened out" or -- as Yale Law Professor Jack Balkin asserts and Digby wonders -- Obama believes he will be President and wants these extreme powers for himself, no doubt, he believes, because he'll exercise them magnanimously, for our Own Good. Whatever the motives -- and I don't know (or much care) what they are -- Obama has embraced a bill that is not only redolent of many of the excesses of Bush's executive power theories and surveillance state expansions, but worse, has done so by embracing the underlying rationale of "Be-scared-and-give-up-your-rights." Note that the very first line of Obama's statement warns us that we face what he calls "grave threats," and that therefore, we must accept that our Leader needs more unlimited power, and the best we can do is trust that he will use it for our Good.
HT: HERP&ES
2 comments:
Oh great. Thank you for posting- i never would have known that.
How wonderful.
The problem is most people will agree to something like that. It doesn't work when people have that much power. Ever read Fahrenheit 451? They're going to take everything away from us and we'll be completely controlled. our nation is going in a very bad direction.
You are welcome. I wouldn't have know about it if Daryl hadn't posted. I depend on him and Chris O'Donnell to keep me informed about political matters.
I tend to think of this
"Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely. Great men are almost always bad men." by John Emerich Edward Dalberg Acton, first Baron Acton (1834–1902)
If we give too much power to anyone, we have no one to blame but ourselves when they abuse it.
Yes, I have read Fahrenheit 451, and I agree our nation is going in a very bad direction.
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