American Grief, Alito-Style – Revolt. Rebel. Resist.

(Cross-posted at Daily Kos and my blog)

Although a diary I did over the weekend slid by over at Daily Kos and here without much notice (current events have been dominating the attention at dKos and here, as they should).  I believe it might grow to be a series for me.

Go back and read it if you like – this one will make more sense if you have an idea of the first one.

After all the blustering, pontificating and hand-wringing, it appears the Alito cloture vote has come to a literal close without even what I would consider token resistance by the Democrats.

It’s time to plan.  Make the jump.
I referenced the Alito nomination in my inaugural American Grief diary.  To wit, I said:

American grief rises to the fore of my consciousness as I watch Sam Alito bob and weave during his SCOTUS confirmation hearings while a majority of Senators from either party posture and pontificate and bluster.  Very few were the real expressions of impact on American lives.  Content to make a political statement that would solidify Senatorial electoral power, the message of Sam Alito’s America was lost – an America that steps on the little guy.  An America that believes women should be forced back into some bizarre second-class citenzenry.  An America that believes in rewarding the powerful with more power.

It was one of many examples of my singular American grief.

I have, for the past two weeks, considered the filibuster a an outside chance.  Way outside.  But I’ve participated – made the calls to vote “no” on cloture.  I’ve burned a lot of phone time and, over the weekend (when the offices were largely empty), a lot of fax time registering my deman for a “no” vote on cloture.  One by one they came to the Senate floor and here’s the Yes and No votes as I have them so far (I will update as more are clarified):

Yes to Cloture:
Nelson – FL
Nelson – NE
Salazar
Landrieu

Chaffee
Gregg
Bauchus
Chambliss
Thune
Demint
Shelby
Liebermann
Roberts
Voinovich
Cantwell
Snowe
Hutchison
Specter
Kyl
Cornyn
Santorum
Brownback
Talent
Hatch
McCain
Sessions
Grassley
Kohl
Frist
Lott
Bingaman
Cochran
Byrd
Coburn
Coleman
Akaka

No to Cloture:
Reed – RI
Schumer
Biden
Kennedy
Kerry
Levin
Bayh
Clinton
Mikulski
Murray
Lautenberg
Reid

Absent:
Ensign

Not.  Even.  Close.

But I’m not surprised.  Nor did this especially enrage me, the Demorats who voted “yes” to cloture.  I’m so worn down and my expectations of my Democratic leaders are so low, I suppose.

But something did enrage me.  The Senators, as they vote, come to the well of the floor of the Senate.  On this day, a day that surely spelled the death of any hope for the little guy, a day that spelled the death of women’s rights, a day that spelled a blank check on executive power, the Senators stood there and talked.  And laughed.  And slapped each other on the back.  And they milled around and talked some more.  And laughed some more.  And slapped a few more backs.  Republicans to Republicans, Democrats to Democrats, Republicans to Democrats, and Democrats to Republicans.

As if nothing was the matter.

These guys must party at funerals – because if it were me and I was a Democratic senator, not only would I vote “no” to cloture and to confirmation, but I would stand, DEFIANT AND ENRAGED on the floor of that Senate apart from all the back-slapping and busines-as-usual-ing.  I would adopt the body language and facial expression of one upon whom news of a great tragedy had just descended and would not carry on in my collegial-Senatorial good humor.

There is nothing to smile about, Senators.  Certainly those who voted “no” to cloture shouldn’t be smiling.  And out of respect for the untimely death of our rights and all we hold dear, those Democrats who inexplicably voted for clotures should wip the smile off their faces and keep their hands in their pockets.

More and more each day I believe only one thing will bring about an appropriate air of gravity in our Democratic leaders:

Revolution.  Rebellion.  Resistance.

On this day, my American Grief overflows.

American Grief

(Cross-posted at Daily Kos, My Left Wing and my blog)

I am not a person prone to a depressed personality.  Like most people, I have good days and bad days.  The former outweigh the latter by a large proportion, I’m glad to say.

I’d have to characterize today as a bad day.  I am, today, overwhelmed by American grief.

More on the flip.
It’s difficult to articulate what I have to say in this diary.  Compelled to write, I am struggling for the words that give life and meaning to a tension wire of emotions that are running beneath my outward exterior.  I woke this morning to stories of the anniversary of the Challenger disaster.  Like many people, I remember being an 18-year old on hiatus from my first year in college, working my first job as a waitress in a popular restaurant in Alexandria, VA.  It was before opening hours and we had the TV on in the bar area as we set up and prepared to meet the day’s customers.  Challenger had received a lot of attention – prior flagging interest in NASA’s space program had sparked efforts to re-engage Americans in the wonders of space exploration and Challenger’s flight was to showcase the first “teacher in space”.  She had captured America’s imagination – she was the sole winner of a contest that began with 10,000 qualified applicants.  I watched the launch with interest.  Challenger’s explosion 76 seconds into its launch on that January day in 1986 is a defining moment of my young adulthood.

Seeing the coverage on television led me to look for coverage of Challenger.  I went to the trusty Goggle home page and searched and came across this site.  I don’t know anything about its owner – but what he had on his page was some very fine video that I downloaded on both the Challenger and Columbia disasters (juxtaposed – link here) and a Katrina retrospective (link here).  If you download either of these, beware – they are large files.

It’s the Katrina video that sent me into a tailspin.  Perhaps it was because I had just finished reading this article on the post-Katrina failures in today’s Washington Post.  Regardless, grief poured in.

The devastation wrought by Katrina is certainly another defining event in my lifetime.  I see the faces of people who have lost everything – I bear witness to the devastation of their lives – but that doesn’t drive American grief.  Disasters happen.  Lives are lost, families are shattered.  What brings American grief is the apathy of official America towards the victims of Katrina and towards the region it deccimated.  I really can’t understand how any genuine human being could stop, even for a few minutes, and try to put themselves in the shoes of a Katrina survivor and fail to move heaven, earth and any and all resources at their disposal to ameliorate the suffering.  All discussion of what people should have known in advance of Katrina aside – there is no excuse for failing to be moved on a visceral human level by the plight of these survivors.  I simply can’t make sense of leadership in our country that feels a necessity to squabble over who and how much and when where Katrina is concerned.  It’s not a negotiable issue – it must be fixed.  These people must be helped.  There are no options where this is concerned – it’s so obvious.

Challenger – 9/11 – Katrina – all are singular events that drive my grief.

But that, in itself, is not my American grief.  American grief is different.

American grief is watching the desperate and abandoned faces of New Orleans residents day after day without seeing any attempt on the part of government to intervene.

American grief rises to the fore of my consciousness as I watch Sam Alito bob and weave during his SCOTUS confirmation hearings while a majority of Senators from either party posture and pontificate and bluster.  Very few were the real expressions of impact on American lives.  Content to make a political statement that would solidify Senatorial electoral power, the message of Sam Alito’s America was lost – an America that steps on the little guy.  An America that believes women should be forced back into some bizarre second-class citenzenry.  An America that believes in rewarding the powerful with more power.

American grief swells when I see leaders who are willing to compromise in action all the principles and tenets which spawned past greatness to bestow, in word only, the same principles and tenets in a “do as I say, not as I do” alternate reality that has become our daily lives.  It swells even further when the very thing this leadership has said over and over and over again – Democratic elections in the middle east are good – yields one of two likely “improper” political asendants in the stunning victory by Hamas in the Palestinian elections (the second, to me, would be the rise of a fundamentalist Shiia in Iraq).  We pushed.  We insisted.  We cried from the rooftops that Democracy would take hold in the middle east.  And, seemingly, it has – just not a Democracy of which our leadership approves.  Therefore, in the ultimate expression of hypocrisy, our government is publicly declaring its refusal to deal with the new Palestinian-elected leadership.  Unbelievable.

American grief becomes overwhelming when I learn that the Constitution and particularly the 4th amendment are being sacrified on the altar of “safety” with very little outrage on the part of average Americans.  I wonder, in the extreme, if this mentality is not similar to those who consider it appropriate and necessary to bomb abortion clinics to “protect life”.  The logic is alarmingly similar to me.

American grief is accentuated and exacerbated every time an American soldier or Iraqi or innocent Palestinian dies in our zeal to “bring Democracy” to the middle east.  

American grief crests when I see the faces of the Ford Corporation’s workers who have just discovered that the company in which they made a life-long career investment is not able to make the investment in kind.  It breaks the dam of reasonability when our American President demonstrates such an appalling lack of connection with the average, working-class American that he talks vaguely of retraining the now-jobless Ford workers.  What?  When?  How?  At what future income level?  How will he pay for it?  How will he ensure it is successful?  It is grievous that this is how our government responds to the plight of its dwindling middle-class citizenry.  It becomes too much to bear when I let myself think about the stockholders banking money on higher Ford stock values – driven higher on the news that Ford will devastate the lives of at least 25,000 of its employees.  I struggle to believe that employees were also stockholders but can’t quite accept that that’s true.

I am surrounded on all levels, in some way, by American grief.  I have my life – there are many, many days when the living of it pushes that grief to the back-reaches of my consciousness.  But it is never absent… It waits to rise up and it asks me one question:

What is this America in which I live?  Is this what our founders envisioned?  Is this the culmination of the promise of the American dream?  A dumbed-down electorate, a continuous sapping of our rights, an inexorable march towards tyranny and oppression, an inevitable apathy towards the plight of the average American?  How did this happen?

It makes me question the adage that “the truth shall set you free”.  It’s not setting us free of this system and these decisions that strip our rights and dignity piece by piece by piece.  It’s not stopping the disgusting move towards compromising everything for which we have always stood in the name of power and supremacy.

There are three options as I see it:

  1. Give up.  Join the disengaged.
  2. Complain a lot and try to enact change within the construct of the system as it exists.
  3. Revolt, rebel, resist.

I’m going with #3.

HOW You May Be Under Surveillance

(Cross-posted at Daily Kos)

And no, the answer is not because you’re blogging here, though I’m sure all of us have wondered as much recently.

An official disclaimer, before I begin.  I do not hold a security clearance.  I have never held a security clearance.  To my knowledge, no one has ever disclosed classified information at any level to me.  Having said that, I have been around the technological side of the law enforcement and intelligence communities long enough to have a picture of the technology behind intelligence and investigative analysis and the laws that back it up.

Want to know why you might be under surveillance?  Make the jump.
A Sidenote and an Additional Dislaimer.  First, the sidenote.  This diary grew out a stream-of-consciousness comment in Soj’s JPEN diary, currently on the recommended list.  The additional disclaimer is that I am going to explain this by use of a scenario.  The scenario has evolved over years of technology companies working with investigative and intelligence agencies.  In short, a technology company will proffer a “likely application” of their technology that fits the mission of the agency or entity on whome they are calling.  It is not a case of a government entity coming to a technology company and saying “What if I wanted to do [insert scary thing here]?”  I do not know for a fact that this technology is being used, but I know that the capability is being sold.

Now to the scenario.

Let’s say that a large wire transfer is made from a bank in Saudia Arabia to four separate banks in the US.  The US banks are in San Francisco, New York, Miami and Washington, DC.  The foreign bank is being surveilled electronically and it is that surveillance which captures the transaction.  At this point the intelligence unit knows only that a foreign bank it considers suspect has made a wire transfer of a sufficiently large sum of money to domestic financial institutions.  They don’t know who made the transfer and they don’t know who owns the US accounts where the monies were deposited.

They go and get a warrant to compel the bank to disclose information on the account holders.  This may be very basic information – for our purposes, let’s say that it’s the name and address listed for each of the four accounts and that each recipient is a different person with a different name and address.  The intelligence unit then sends the names and addresses gleaned from the warrant to another intelligence unit who maintains a central terrorist screening database.  The individuals at the terrorist screening database who receive the request to run the names are not told why they are running the names.  They are only to report whether or not the names (normalized to allow for common misspellings and differences in linguistics) occur in their database.  In essence, they are returning a “true” or “false” answer to the original intelligence unit – “true” if the name occurs, “false” if it doesn’t.  For the sake of this scenario, the results of all four names are “false”.

But it doesn’t end there.

The original intelligence unit has reason to believe that the foreign bank has initiated transactions that are suspect in nature in the past and that the current transactions are so sizeable that they necessitate additional investigation.  Having the names and addresses of the US account holders, they use a visualization application to perform link analysis.  Link analysis is exactly that – it is a visual software toolset that depicts relationships between persons, known and unknown.  Stepping away from our scenario, here’s a sample screenshot of such a link analysis tool:

(You can link to a larger picture here)

Note the different representations and icons for persons and links.  This is a powerful investigative and analytical tool for enforcement and intelligence analysts.  It allows them to “see” a network of persons, companies, countries, accounts, etc.

Now back to the scenario.  Right now, the links in the software are between the four individuals, their domestic financial institutions, and the original foreign bank.  In short, it’s a pretty elaborate depiction of the wire transfer without any specific information as to nature of the recipients.  On its own, it doesn’t give the analyst much information that wasn’t already known.

Enter, then, what I will refer to as the information repositories.  Let’s say that I wanted to take the name and address of one of the US funds recipients and determine who their “known associates” are.  Let’s say further that there is a company out there that specializes in collecting information about people.  Some of that information is public, some of it isn’t.

Stepping outside of the scenario, think of this capability in a very personal way.  If I were to take your name and street address and plug it into an application that quickly spidered publicly available data sources, what information would I get back?  Well, first, I would get all the information about your home, what you paid for it, when you bought it, where it is, who the neighbors are, what they paid for it, who (if anyone) is listed as a director of your homeowner’s association, whether or not you have any records in the criminal, civil and/or appellate court systems, whether or not you have judgments against you and liens against your property, etc. and so forth.  In short, I could find out a lot about you simply by bringing together in one place a way to index and search these publicly available data sources.

Now back to the scenario.  I want to know more about each of these four funds recipients.  I can spider not only public data sources but also government-held data sources.  I can get a picture of their income, employment, what they own, what charities they donate to, what they owe, who their neighbors are, who their co-workers are, who their children and spouse are, who they associate with, etc.  I’m starting to fill in the blanks.

Let’s say that one of the individuals I’m investigating is a male named John Doe.  Through use of the information repositories and the application technology they offer, I know that John Doe gives money regularly to a mosque where he worship.  I also learn that YOU, the reader, are a neighbor of John Doe.  Not only that – John Doe, in trying to give the appearance of being an upstanding citizen, sits as the Treasurer of your homeowner’s association, of which you are President.  John Doe is a local business owner – he owns a home improvement contracting company – and you, the reader, being a good neighbor, have used John Doe and have paid him to do work on your home.  The investigating agency knows this because John Doe has declared what you paid him as income and a check from you has been deposited, at some point in the past, in John Doe’s account.

The same account to which John Doe received the wire transfer of funds from the foreign bank, the very transaction which started the whole process.

YOU are now added as a link to John Doe in the analyst’s link analysis software tool.  All of this information as well as information from other strong known associates of John Doe is used to apply to FISA to put you under surveillance.

Seem far-fetched?  It isn’t.  Let me say for the record that many of these technologies and tools are invaluable in doing legitimate investigative work.  Their existence pre-dates by far the 9/11 attacks.  Picture a crime syndicate and the power of such a tool in unravelling all of the tendrils – hell – picture the value of such a tool in mapping the Abramoff investigation.  So I’m saying that the tools themselves are not bad.  

What is bad is the existance of these tools in today’s intelligence climate.  As far as I know, nothing that I laid out in my scenario involved an instance of illegal surveillance.  I can’t even envision the scenario that would develop when I consider illegal wiretapping.

The only thing that protects you from being involved in a scenario like this is some degree of transparency in the law enforcement and intelligence arenas and a DEMAND that governmental entities follow the letter of the law when it comes to surveillance of private citizens.

Big brother is a series of 0’s and 1’s and is, for all intents and purposes, the very means by which I am communicating with you today.

How’s that for alarming?

The FISA Information You Need To Know to Fight Back

(Cross-posted at Daily Kos, My Left Wing and my blog)

Certainly the Bush administration is in a pickle over the recent revelation that Bush himself, in 2002, authorized the National Security Agency (NSA) to conduct electronic surveillance against US citizens.  Presumably, and I’m paraphrasing the President himself with this, it was only to listen to bad guys talking to bad guys.  According to Bush, this action was not only legal but required in his solemn duty to protect America and its citizens.

I think it’s worthwhile to take a closer look at FISA itself, inform ourselves, and be prepared for the arguments the administration is going to make as to why these secret, warrantless surveillance activities are not, as the President asserts, illegal.  In fact, his argument is that they are proper.

Read on.
First, if you would like to browse the full text of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), you can click here.

I found a great deal of information about the explanation of FISA at the The Electronic Frontier Foundation’s (EFF) web site.  I visited their page detailing the constitution of the EFF’s Board of Directors and nothing leapt out at me as to whether EFF is politically slanted – the Board seems to be comprised of technologists, law professors, and telecommunications industry representatives.  Visit the link and check for yourself.

With that out of the way, the FISA FAQ they provided contained a great deal of information (link).

From their site:

What is the purpose of FISA?

FISA is aimed at regulating the collection of “foreign intelligence” information in furtherance of U.S. counterintelligence, whether or not any laws were or will be broken.  (-snip-)  Department of Defense (DOD) guidelines state that the purpose of counterintelligence collection is to detect espionage, sabotage, terrorism, and related hostile intelligence activities to “deter, to neutralize, or to exploit them.”

In short, counterintelligence and criminal prosecution are different.

I read that as pretty straightforward and very broad.  FISA is there and was created with the goal of allowing a mechanism to collect foreign intelligence to protect America and its citizens.  It continues:

How does FISA fit with regulation of electronic surveillance?

Given the “tendency of those who execute the criminal laws . . . to obtain conviction by means of unlawful seizures,” the Supreme Court has viewed commumications interception as an especially grave intrusion on rights of privacy and speech.

(-snip-)

Thus, the Court outlined seven constitutional requirements: (1) a showing of probable cause that a particular offense has been or is about to be committed; (2) the applicant must describe with particularity the conversations to be intercepted; (3) the surveillance must be for a specific, limited period of time in order to minimize the invasion of privacy (the N.Y. law authorized two months of surveillance at a time); (4) there must be continuing probable cause showings for the surveillance to continue beyond the original termination date; (5) the surveillance must end once the conversation sought is seized; (6) notice must be given unless there is an adequate showing of exigency; and (7) a return on the warrant is required so that the court may oversee and limit the use of the intercepted conversations.

Indeed, the Court said that if “neither a warrant nor a statute authorizing eavesdropping can be drawn so as to meet the Fourth Amendment’s requirements . . . then the ‘fruits’ of eavesdropping devices are barred under the Amendment.”

Where intelligence operations are concerned, however, the bounds of the Fourth Amendment are less clear than they are for ordinary criminal investigations. FISA creates a special court and legal regime for counterintelligence surveillance orders.

(-snip-)

FISA does not regulate the use of electronic surveillance outside of the United States.

There’s additional information in this section at the link provided above with case and law citations if you’re so inclined.  I’ve extracted the parts I found interesting (I’m not a lawyer) in understanding FISA, its requirements, and applicability to the growing questions around Bush’s current activities.  As such, I read in that section a delicate balancing act between the need to collect intelligence and guaranteeing the 4th Amendment rights of US citizens.  Which brings me to the next tidbit:

Is there really a secret FISA court?

Yes. FISA established a special court, composed of seven federal district court judges appointed by the Chief Justice for staggered terms and are from different circuits.

(-snip-)Individual judges of the FISC review the Attorney General’s applications for authorization of electronic surveillance aimed at obtaining foreign intelligence information. The proceedings are nonadversarial and are based solely on the DOJ’s presentations through its Office of Intelligence Policy and Review.

The records and files of the cases are sealed and may not be revealed even to persons whose prosecutions are based on evidence obtained under FISA warrants, except to a limited degree set by district judges’ rulings on motions to suppress.  (…)  There is no provision for the return of each executed warrant to the FISC, much less with an inventory of items taken, nor for certification that the surveillance was conducted according to the warrant and its “minimization” requirements.

The FISC meets two days monthly, and two of the judges are routinely available in the Washington, D.C. area on other days.

I have heard on cable news different figures on exactly how many FISC judges there are – this document says 7, but I’ve heard also 10 and 11.  What’s interesting to me is that FISA judges are appointed to the FISC by the Chief Justice of the SCOTUS.  Previously this would have been Rehnquist.  The job now falls to Robert.  Which jogged a memory for me, from listening to his confirmation testimony.  Of FISA and the FISC Roberts said:

Question from Senator DEWINE:

Judge, I want to ask you about one of your more important, probably least understood — not by you, but least understood by the public — role, if you are confirmed as the chief justice. And that is your job to appoint the members of the FISA court.

Judge, as you know, in 1978, Congress passed the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. This law, of course, set up the FISA court.

As you well know, this is the court that our intelligence agents go to when they want to obtain wiretaps or search warrants against terrorists and foreign spies — a very important court, a court that meets in secret, a court that deals with the most important national security matters that we have, really, in our country, but also a court it deals with our precious civil liberties.

And, Judge, because it’s a court that meets in secret, it doesn’t gave the public scrutiny, it doesn’t have the glare of publicity and, quite candidly, does not have much oversight.

So I would like to know, besides what’s in the statute — the statute sets out that it will be your job to select the 11 judges who sit on the FISA court, the three judges who sit on the FISA court of review. There’s certain guidelines in the statute.

But besides that, I wonder if you could tell us what your criteria will be when you select these men, these women, who will serve on the court. And I wonder if you could give me your personal assurance that this will be something that will be very important to you, that you will take a hands-on approach and that you will be very personally involved in.

Because really it is a question of the utmost national security. These are people who are going to make sometimes life and death decisions for our country.

ROBERTS: I appreciate that, Senator. And if I am confirmed, that is something that I will address and take very seriously.

I think, as in many areas, my first priority is going to be to listen, to learn a little bit more about what’s involved.

I’ll be very candid. When I first learned about the FISA court, I was surprised. It’s not what we usually think of when we think of a court. We think of a place where we can go, we can watch, the lawyers argue, and it’s subject to the glare of publicity. And the judges explain their decision to the public and they can examine them. That’s what we think of as a court.

This is a very different and unusual institution. That was my first reaction. I appreciate the reasons that it operates the way it does. But it does seem to me that the departures from the normal judicial model that are involved there put a premium on the individuals involved.

I think the people who are selected for that tribunal have to be above reproach. There can’t be any question that these are among the best judges that our system has, the fairest judges, the ones who are most sensitive to the different issues involved, because they don’t have the oversight of the public being able to see what’s going on.

Again, to be perfectly honest, it is a very unusual situation, and I do think it places a great premium on making sure that the best qualified people for that position are selected.

DEWINE: I appreciate your personal attention to that. I know how important you know it is, Judge.

And I would just add one more comment, that that court, as all courts do, but even more so, not only makes decisions, not only decides whether to issue the warrant or not, but it’s the feedback that the Justice Department gets and the law enforcement agencies get that tells them what they can do and can’t do. And that feedback is unbelievably important and it affects the intelligence operations in this country and is just vitally, vitally important.

My emphasis added.  It seems to me from that that both DeWine and Roberts take the mission and import of FISA seriously.

Senator Leahy also asked a question of Roberts regarding the FISA court:

LEAHY: Let me switch gears again.

Senator Grassley is not here right now, and Senator Specter and I have worked for several years to shed some light on the FISA court, the foreign intelligence court.

A lot of Americans are affected by their decisions. Most Americans don’t know how it works, don’t know whether their civil liberties are being curtailed or violated. We added some sunshine provision. The attorney general now submits a biannual report to four congressional committees, details how many people are the target of electronic surveillance and so on. It’s still inadequate in the fact it doesn’t get public reporting.

If you’re confirmed as chief justice, you’re the overseer of the FISA court. Most people don’t even look at that role of the chief justice. I think it’s probably one of the most important ones if you’re going to talk about the liberties and how they’re protected.

Would you be willing to work with members of Congress to add more transparency, or do you believe there’s enough transparency in the work of the FISA court now?

ROBERTS: Senator, you said you think this is something most Americans aren’t aware of. I suggest probably most judges aren’t aware of…

LEAHY: Well, that’s probably so.

ROBERTS: It is a specialized court. I will tell you when I became aware of it, it’s a surprising institution. It’s an unusual set-up.

LEAHY: Certainly different than what we think in our system of…

ROBERTS: That was exactly my reaction.

On the other hand, Congress, in setting up the court, obviously concluded there were reasons to do it that way.

I was asked a question about appointing the judges to it and my response was that, given the unusual nature of it — very unusual nature, given the usual traditions of judicial processes — that the people appointed to it have to be of the highest quality, undoubted commitment to all the basic principles, both of the need for the court and the need to protect civil liberties.

That I think is very important.

Beyond that, I would just tell you I don’t know enough about the operations of the court at this point and how it functions to be able to make any representations about what I would do, other than that I certainly appreciate that it’s an unusual establishment and in many respects doesn’t have the sorts of protections that the normal judicial process has, and that I would be sensitive to those concerns.

LEAHY: And I’d hope — my time is up. I apologize. But I’d hope that, if you are confirmed, that you might be willing — and I think Senators Grassley, Specter, and myself could put together some suggestions — at least keep an open mind on it.

ROBERTS: Certainly, Senator.

LEAHY: Because in an electronic age, in a digital age when more and more information is being pulled in on Americans that we sometimes don’t even know about, it is frightening. We want security, but we want to be like — as Benjamin Franklin said, a people who’d give up their liberties for security deserve neither. Thank you.

Again, my emphasis added.  Link to the DeWine transcript here and the Leahy transcript here.

A few observations.  First, DeWine’s emphasis was on the national security aspects of FISA yet both it and Roberts’ response underscored the necessity and gravity of the FISA court and the Chief Justice’s role in that court.  Second, Leahy’s emphasis was much more on civil liberties protections and a need for great transparency.  At the risk of slipping on my tinfoil hat, here, I found Leahy’s line of inquiry very interesting.  Leahy is not on the Intelligence Committee.  A little tickle occurred in the back of my brain, however, when he referenced “transparency” and a greater need for oversight, especially in light of the fact that the Bush administration is claiming that it briefed various Congressional leaders.  I can’t find any reference to a public statement on FISA specifically on Senator Leahy’s website nor can I find any indication that he was one of the Congressional leaders who was briefed.  Yet I find it remarkable that he was so hard-over on the issue of transparency and oversight.  Perhaps this is just a long-standing issue he has had with FISA – I don’t know – but I wonder at what specific Senators know but can’t disclose (due to the classified nature of what they know) and, given that, how they might draw attention to the issue without violating disclosure laws.  (End speculative editorial comment).

Back to FISA.

Why is there a special legal regime for “foreign intelligence” surveillance?

But in the 1970s the political winds changed. The 1975-76 Church Committee hearings documented extraordinary federal government abuse of surveillance powers. Examples included the the NSA’s Operation Shamrock and Operation Minaret, CIA’s Operation CHAOS, the FBI’s COINTELPRO domestic harassment of dissenters and anti-war protesters that included illegal wiretapping, and the illegal burglaries of the Nixon White House “plumbers.”

The Church Committee Report found that covert action had been excessive, had circumvented the democratic process, and had violated the Constitution. It concluded that Congress needed to prescribe rules for intelligence activities.

On the judicial front, the Supreme Court first confronted the tension between unmonitored executive branch surveillance and civil liberties in United States v. U.S. District Court, 407 U.S. 297 (1972), in which the United States charged defendants with conspiracy to destroy government property. Defendants sought electronic surveillance information, held by the prosecution, that the CIA obtained during a potentially illegal wiretap, wanting to ascertain whether the government had relied on information in the indictment or the case for conviction and to suppress any tainted evidence at trial. The Attorney General admitted that a warrantless wiretap had intercepted conversations involving the defendants.

Before the Supreme Court, the government defended its actions on the basis of the Constitution and the Title III national security disclaimer. The Court rejected the statutory argument, saying that “Congress . . . simply did not legislate with respect to national security surveillances.” As for the constitutional argument, the Court accepted that the President had the power “to protect our Government against those who would subvert or overthrow it by unlawful means” and that this power justified electronic surveillance of would-be subversives.

My emphasis added.

Wow.  A lot of information in that excerpt.  First, follow the links on Shamrock, Minaret, CHAOS and COINTELPRO.  I’m sure the links I’ve provided only scratch the surface of what these programs did and they are frightening.  The depth of surveillance that was being conducted against Americans in violation of their 4th Amendment rights is appalling.  It’s clear that the Nixon administration’s activities were the catalyst to address civil liberties abuses that had been going on for a long period of time.  Second, note the import of the SCOTUS decision in the excerpt.  We are seeing possible implications of that ruling today.  See EZ Writer’s recent diary about terror cases being threatened by Bush’s use of warrantless wiretaps.  Third, note that SCOTUS rejected the statutory argument of invoking the Constitution as a basis for warrantless wiretaps.  Finally, however, note the SCOTUS’ validation of the President’s right to use electronic surveillance of “would-be subversives” on Constitutional grounds.  I read this as a conundrum.

Invoking the “broader spirit” of the Fourth Amendment and “the convergence of First and Fourth Amendment values” in national security wiretapping cases, however, the Court was especially wary of possible abuses of the national security power. The Court then balanced “the duty of Government to protect the domestic security, and the potential danger posed by unreasonable surveillance to individual privacy and free expression,” and found that waiving the Fourth Amendment probable cause requirement could lead the executive to “yield too readily to pressures to obtain incriminating evidence and overlook potential invasions of privacy and protected speech.” Justice Powell wrote that the inconvenience to the government is “justified in a free society to protect constitutional values.”

The Court emphasized that this case involved only the domestic aspects of national security: “We . . . express no opinion as to, the issues which may be involved with respect to activities of foreign powers or their agents.” It invited Congress to act: “Given these potential distinctions between Title III criminal surveillances and those involving the domestic security, Congress may wish to consider protective standards for the latter which differ from those already prescribed for specified crimes in Title III. Different standards may be compatible with the Fourth Amendment if they are reasonable both in relation to the legitimate need of Government for intelligence information and the protected rights of our citizens.”

My emphasis added.

There’s the proverbial “money shot”.  SCOTUS invited Congress to act and it did act, creating FISA to balance all these delicate concerns for security and simultaneous protection of 4th Amendment rights.

Go read the whole FAQ – it’s fascinating.  I’ll summarize a few of the remaining high points:

  • FISA can be used for ‘ordinary criminal investigation’ with qualifications.  Those qualifications are that the investigation must have foreign intelligence information (FII) collection as its primary purpose.
  • FISA is not limited to electronic eavesdropping and wiretapping.  It can be used to permit ‘covert physical entries in connection with security investigations’.
  • FISA is not bound as are traditional warrants to show probably cause that a crime was or is being committed.
  • The FBI can use FISA surveillance information in criminal trials as long as the information was gathered with FII as the original target.  The prosecutorial evidence does not have to be related to FII.
  • FISA requests are funneled through the Justice Department.  The Attorney General of the US must first approve them.
  • Neither FISA defendants nor their counsel are likely to be given access to underlying FISA infromation for the purpose of challenging the validity of the surveillance.

FISA itself is viewed by many as a dangerous piece of legislation.  From the FAQ document:

“…FISA powers are broad and vague, and the secrecy of FISA proceedings makes FISA powers susceptible to abuse.”

Wrapup – My Summary

I started this diary because I want to see what arguments are coming when Congress returns.  I was watching MSNBC last night, Hardball to be specific.  Nora O’Donnell is subbing for Matthews and spent a great deal of time talking and asking questions about the willingness of Congresspersons to take up the legality question of the President’s actions.  The consensus was that Congress, on both sides of the aisle, will take the issue up in a strong fashion because the President’s actions bring into question the legitimacy of Congress itself.  I won’t go into a whole tangential diatribe on Congress’ “legitimacy” (though I’m tempted) – but what was said rings true to me.  If for no other reason than the fact that inaction would invalidate the mission of Congress, they are going to hit this issue hard.

So in doing this diary I learned the particulars and the nuances of FISA and here’s what I think:

  • Abuse of wiretapping and electronic eavesdropping was pervasive in the 1960’s and 1970’s.  It’s quite likely we will never really know how egregiously our rights as American citizens were repeatedly violated.
  • There was a very real disconnect, prior to FISA, between the statutory powers of the President and the Constitutional necessity of the President to protect the US and its citizens.
  • FISA was carefully and thoughtfully drafted specifically to address this disconnect and created a broad framework to strike the balance between civil liberties and national security.
  • While FISA, in the opinion of some, may not have enough transparency or oversight, it has been held to be Constitution and is the law of the land.
  • The Bush administration and specifically the President are attempting to undo legislation that was born out of years of abuses of civil liberties.

I find it highly ironic that Bush is doing the same types of things in his administration, under the same auspices no less (national security), as the activities which led us to the FISA in the first place.  Are we living in some strange circular world where we allow mistakes that imperil the Constitution to be repeated?  What he’s done is illegal.  There’s no explaining or excusing that away.

I understand that the Bush administration is taking the “trust me” route.  The retort I would specifically use to that invocation would be why do I have to rely on trusting you when laws exist to ensure that you are being trustworthy??

Finally, the ultimate question, as far as I’m concerned: FISA gives all the necessary authorities and latitude to the Executive branch to ensure that national security interests are protected with a sensitivity towards civil liberties.  Why would the Bush administration feel the necessity to go around it?  That’s the question we need to keep asking over and over – of our Congresspeople and each other and to anyone who will listen.

If you’ve made it this far, I thank you – it’s a long diary (lots of information, I hope) but one that I felt compelled to write.

Shop NOLA – Revisited

(Cross-posted at Daily Kos and my blog)

About two weeks ago, hannah posted this diary with links to New Orleans businesses for dKos users to shop during the holidays (and, hopefully, beyond).

I took up Hannah’s call and did a lot of my shopping through the links she provided.  One of these transactions put me into contact with Terrie Day, a Magazine Street shop owner.  I had a lengthy conversation with Terrie this morning that I think the Daily Kos community needs to know about.

Read on.
At the end of the diary I will re-post links to all of the businesses Hannah highlighted in her original diary at which are still contained on her personal blog site.  Be sure you at least check these businesses out – they desperately need our help.

Terrie runs a store called Sabai Jewelry.  After the original diary I went to Sabai’s site and found several items that I could purchase for a variety of people on my holiday list.  There were a few glitches with Terrie’s site, glitches that can’t be fixed until things settle down for those folks in new Orleans.  Suffice it to say that I could choose items but not complete the transaction online… So Terrie and I started up an email dialogue which moved to a phone dialogue earlier this morning.

Terrie’s business seems to be intact.  She was able, with some cleanup, to re-open.  Her home didn’t fare as well… It was among the hardest hit, winding up under eight feet of water.  The lower level of her home is uninhabitable.  She, however, is one of the lucky ones in that she had a second level to her house.  She lives on this second level today, more than three months (closer to four) after Katrina devastated New Orleans and she lives there without power.  

She has an amazingly good attitude though it is interspersed with profound frustration with the way things are for those who have returned to New Orleans.  For one, we talked about the rebuilding of the levees.  Everyone knows the levees have to be rebuilt… But The International Herald Tribune has reprinted this article from The New York Times.  The article is aptly titled “Death of an American City”.  From the article:

The rumbling from Washington that the proposed cost of better levees is too much has grown louder. Pretending we are going to do the necessary work eventually, while stalling until the next hurricane season is upon us, is dishonest and cowardly. Unless some clear, quick commitments are made, the displaced will have no choice but to sink roots in the communities where they landed.

This has a very real effect on business owners like Terrie Day.  They speak to displaced friends and business owners, many of whom are waiting to see if anyone will step up and commit to rebuilding the levees in New Orleans.  Many don’t want to return until a demonstrable plan is set in place.  It is still an open question whether business owners like Terrie can survive while bureaucrats argue over the cost (a PITTANCE compared to what we’re spending to rebuild Iraq, but that’s another diary) and responsibility for rebuilding the levee system.

You can help.  I explained to Terrie how I found her web site and all the things that caused me to shop NOLA online… She was overwhelmed.  And let me be the first to tell all of you – IT’S WORKING.  Terrie told me that she’s seen a noticeable increase in traffic of out-of-state customers to her business – and those customers are placing orders.

IT’S WORKING.

So I reiterate Hannah’s original diary imploring Kossacks to consider shopping NOLA online.  I don’t think it’s a big leap to say that it does make a difference – and the difference could possibly be whether these intrepid and corageous business owners sink or swim in their post-Katrina devastation.  Won’t you help?

New Orleans Businesses Online, by way of Hannah’s blog:

Jewelry and Fine Items

Sabai Jewelry Gallery – (504) 899-9555 – SUGGESTED ITEM: SINGING THE BLUES BRACELET
As You Like It – Silver Shop – (504) 897-6915 or 1-800-828-2311 – FOR THE SILVER CONOISSEUR
Melange Sterling – Silver Shop, Inc. – (504) 899-4796, 1-800-513-3991 – GREAT FOR A FLEUR DE LIS  PEARL NECKLACE
Mignon Faget, Ltd – (504) 891-2005 – SUGGESTED ITEM: JEWELED DONKEY PENDANT
Ruby Ann Bertram-Harker – (504) 897-0811 or  (800) 826-7282 – SUGGESTED ITEM: CARNIVAL CROWN PIN
Katy Beh Contemporary Jewelry – 877.katybeh  504 896 9600

Parfumes

Hove – Located in New Orleans’ French Quarter, Hové® uses the finest of essential oils and ingredients from all over the world to create its fragrances. Hové®’s only store is its 18th Century shop in New Orleans.

Clothes

House of Lounge
Total Woman – 504 891 3964 – Offering the most sophisticated styles since 1979
Jean Therapy – (504) 897-5535 – DESIGNER JEANS
Orient Expressed Imports, Inc. – (504) 899-3060 – CHILDREN’S HAND-SMOCKED CLOTHES
Fleur de Paris – 800-229-1899 – “We are thankful that our beautiful shop was spared the worst of both Katrina and Rita, and we are anxious to dress and accessorize our customers.”
Perlis Clothing – (504) 895-8661 – SUGGESTED ITEMS: CAJUN CLOTHES COMPANY SHIRTS WITH CRAWFISH LOGO
Pippen Lane – (504) 269-0106 – FOR CHILDREN’S GIFTS

Chocolates and Candies

Blue Frog Chocolates – (504) 269-5707 – Chosen the Best Candy Shop in New Orleans for the last five years
Oliveaux – (504) 899-8120 – CANDLES AND CHOCOLATE AS STOCKING STUFFERS
Laura’s Candies – (800) 992-9699 – Our delicious Creole pralines and hand-made chocolates are made fresh daily in our French Quarter kitchen with recipes that  date back to the 18th century
Aunt Sally’s – Aunt Sally’s – New Orleans Most Famous Pralines
French Market – 800-554-7234
Cafe du Monde
Zapp’s Potato Chip Company – 800-HOTCHIP – Gimmie Those Chips!!
THE ABITA ONLINE STORE – Support New Orleans Restoration

Books

Octavia Books – (504) 269-5707 – CHECK OUT THEIR STAFF PICKS AND LOCAL SECTION
Beaucoup Books – 504 895 2663

Arts, Crafts, Housewares and Antiques

Cole Pratt Gallery – Fine art – (504) 891-6789
Slingluff Photo – 504 314 6266
Moxy Studios – 504.309.2516
JC Graphics – Katrina-related designs by Louisiana artist “jc” can be seen at NOLA LIVES!
Aux Belles Choses – (504) 891-1009 – FOR HOME AND GARDEN ENTHUSIASTS
Gila Mosaics – 504 949-2338 – Fine Art Mosaics, interior & exterior installations & commissions
The Private Connection – 1 888 263 9693 – The Private Connection features arts of Indonesia, handcrafted gifts, jewelry, fashion and accessories, unique furniture and architectural pieces. The N.Y. Times named it “The most cheerful shop on the street!
Top Drawer Antiques – (504) 897-1004 – FINE, ANTIQUE FURNITURE
French Quarter Candles

Not Satisfied–There’s More

Shop for New Orleans

When You’re Done With Shopping for Yourself

Family to Family – IT’S IN THE BAG!

Be patient with these vendors – if you can’t get their website to work for you but you know you want something, email them – call them – get the business to them.

Please recommend this diary.  I hate asking for this – but I really think we are having an effect and can continue to have an effect.  I don’t know if the comments thing is fixed, but let’s get this effort, STARTED BY HANNAH (major snaps to her), noticed.

One final note – Terrie has asked for a link to Daily Kos.  I’m going to send her the link as well as the link to this diary.  I’m going to stay in touch with her and encourage her to keep the information about what really occurs in New Orleans in the eyes of our very motivated, dedicated and caring community.

Republicans Use Mind Control – Literally.

(Cross-posted at Daily Kos, My Left Wing and my blog.)

Like many people, I have heard of and buy into the idea put forward in Vance Packard’s 1957 book titled The Hidden Persuaders.  In a nutshell, Packard talked, in part, about “motivational research” marketing techniques being used to influence purchasing behavior in America in the post-war boom.  You might relate better to the phrase “subliminal advertising”, though that was not the phrase used at the time.  From Snopes.com:

Advertisements that focused on consumers’ hopes, fears, guilt, and sexuality were designed to persuade them to buy products they’d never realized they needed. Marketers who could reach into the hearts and minds of American consumers soon found consumers’ wallets to be within easy grasp as well.

Scary stuff.  Read on.
James Vicary actually coined the term “subliminal advertising”.  His most notable experiment involved a movie theatre.  Again, from Snopes.com:

Vicary placed a tachistoscope in the theater’s projection booth, and all throughout the playing of the film Picnic, he flashed a couple of different messages on the screen every five seconds. The messages each displayed for only 1/3000th of a second at a time, far below the viewers’ threshold of conscious perceptibility. The result of displaying these imperceptible suggestions — “Drink Coca-Cola” and “Hungry? Eat Popcorn” — was an amazing 18.1% increase in Coca-Cola sales, and a whopping 57.8% jump in popcorn purchases. Thus was demonstrated the awesome power of “subliminal advertising” to coerce unwary buyers into making purchases they would not otherwise have considered.

The veracity of the experiment has been challenged and the validity of the results have been questioned.  Despite these questions, the reaction to the experiment were sensational.  In 1974, in fact, the FCC banned “subliminal advertising” from both radio and television airwaves.

This is the classic example of subliminal advertising.  Whether or not it occurred and, further, was effective remains an open question.  What is not an open question, however, is the fact that “motivational research” is alive and well and is being used on Americans each and every day.  One of the most effective uses is in political advertising.

You’re being guided; directed – and it’s the Bush Administration who has mastered the art of this technique.

I want to state up front that the idea for this post came from reading Al Franken’s book The Truth – with Jokes.  Have you heard of Terror Management Theory (TMT)?  If you answered “no”, join the club – I hadn’t, either.  It is an actual scientific discipline.  From Wikipedia:

Terror management theory (TMT) is a developing area of study within the academic study of psychology. It looks at what researchers claim to be the implicit emotional reactions of people when confronted with the psychological terror of knowing we will eventually die (it is widely believed that our awareness of mortality is a trait that is unique to humans).

–snip–

The Theory embarks on the assumption that the capability of self-reflection and the consciousness of one’s own mortality, can be regarded as a continuous source for existential anguish. Culture diminishes this psychological terror by providing meaning, organisation and continuity to men and women. Compliance with cultural values enhances the feeling of security and self-esteem, provided that the individual is capable to live in accordance with these particular cultural standards. The belief in the rightness of the cultural values and standards creates the conviction to live a reasonable and meaningful life. Because of this men and women strive to have their cultural worldview confirmed by others, thereby receiving the community’s estimation.

Let me net out how I read that statement.  Subscribing to a culture and cultural norms lessens the anguish of the knowledge that we will eventually die.  Working towards a purpose and receiving validation of that purpose within the norms of society relieves the pressure and fear that accompany death.  (Note: I’m not a doctor nor do I have more than a junior-level psychology class under my belt.  This was, for better or worse, my slightly-informed interpretation.)

Now – let’s come back to Al Franken’s book.  Franken introduces us to TMT as part of an effort to explain how and why George W. Bush was re-elected in 2004.  Think back on the 2004 Presidential campaign (I know, I know – it’s painful to do so).  Do you remember the ad that most referred to as “Wolves”?  I do.  A link to a Windows Media version can be found here if you’re interested.  Needless to say it was a dark and frightening ad.  The text went like this:

In an increasingly dangerous world…
Even after the first terrorist attack on America…
John Kerry and the liberals in Congress voted to slah America’s intelligence operations by 6 billion dollars…
Cuts so deep they would have weakened America’s defenses.
And weakness attracts those who are waiting to do America harm.

Franken points out that the voice-over is deceptively vague – which first terrorist attack?  It makes a difference in the truthfulness of the ad itself.  But I digress.

A lot of criticism followed that ad, decried loudly by those on the left as “fear-mongering”.  It was fear-mongering – but it was so much more than that.  It was likely a carefully orchestrated application of TMT.

I don’t have the background or the patience to detail, specifically, the studies that I found on the internet when researching this.  In the days immediately following 9/11, Bush’s approval rating soared to 86%.  86%!!!  One studious researcher proved empirically that Bush’s approval ratings increased every time the terror alert level was raised by the Government.  Another ground-breaking study solidified the connection between fear, a desire to be released from fear, the likelihood that this strong desire will lead to a search for psychological security, and the strong preference to choose a “charismatic” leader in these types of circumstances who affirm our world view and cause us to feel safe.  This quote sums it all up for me:

In Escape from Freedom, Eric Fromm (1941) proposed that loyalty to charismatic leaders results from a defensive need to feel a part of a larger whole, and surrendering one’s freedom to a larger-than-life leader can serve as a source of self-worth and meaning in life. Ernest Becker (The Denial of Death, 1973) posited that when mainstream worldviews are not serving people’s need for psychological security, concerns about mortality impel people to devote their psychological resources to following charismatic leaders who bolster their self-worth by making them feel like they are valued participants in a great mission to heroically triumph over evil.

I don’t know about you, but I read that quote and thought of America’s willingness to get on-board with the Patriot Act, to give up freedoms without question in a quest for safety (relief from the fear of death-by-terrorist-attack).  It also made me think of how often Bush invokes 9/11 and other fearful things (bird flu).  It’s a deliberate and scientific attempt to solidify the following of his “charismatic” leadership.  Can you name other other charismatic leaders?  I certainly can – and many of them were and are not nice people.

Now go back to the “Wolves” ad and read/watch it again.  We all knew at the time that it was fear-mongering.  I didn’t realize, however, that it was scientifically orchestrated to cause voters to behave in a way that would favor George W. Bush and/or why it was so effective.

Franken concludes this particular discussion with an interesting analysis.  He takes issue with the 2004 Bush win being based on “moral values”.  Summarily, voters in the 2004 election who identified themselves as “moral values” voters (those who place moral and ethical issues at the top of their list) represented a much lower percentage (22%) than did the same group in the 2000 election (35%) and the 1996 election (40%).  In 2000 and 1996 those who put the abortion issue at the top of their list were 14% and 9% respectively.  Abortion voters were not considered in the moral/ethical values figures.  therefore, nearly half the electorate voted on moral/ethical issues in 1996 and 2000 while in 2004, only about 20% did.  The argument, then, is that “moral values” was an illusion.  The Bush campaign simply applied science to scare people into voting for them.  And it worked.

Tell me, in light of this, how what Bush did in 2004 is any different than the unacceptable practice of subliminal advertising.  It’s nothing short of manipulation and 51% of America was hoodwinked.

Did Anyone Notice When Cheney Said This??

(Cross-posted at Daily Kos, my blog and My Left Wing.)

My last post was generally about the ratcheting-up of defensive rhetoric by the President in two recently-delivered speeches (on Veteran’s Day and on a stopover in Alaska). Vice President Dick Cheney’s speech last night, then, wasn’t shocking given the new “strategy” to defend the war in Iraq. The “strategy” seems to be:

  • Deny and decry the allegation of misleading America into war.
  • Claim that a Congressional investigation cleared the Administration of manipulating intelligence – be sure not to mention that the investigation itself was about whether or not the Administration pressured intelligence analysts and agents to deliver specific content – the current allegations are about whether that intelligence was misused.
  • Attack specifically the Democrats who voted for the Iraq war authorization.

Now that that recap is out of the way, I caught something a bit curious in Cheney’s remarks at the Frontiers of Freedom Institute 2005 Ronald Reagan Gala last night. Read on.
First, if you’re interested, the full text of the speech can be found here. Here’s the comment that caught my eye:

But in the last several weeks we have seen a wild departure from that tradition [of truthfulness and good faith]. And the suggestion that’s been made by some U.S. senators that the President of the United States or any member of this administration purposely misled the American people on pre-war intelligence is one of the most dishonest and reprehensible charges ever aired in this city.

My emphasis added. Now – a little over a week ago I commented in this diary on Daily Kos. My comment was this:

Well, in the downstream of that exchange (and it was WAY heated – CNN and MSNBC covered it extensively) questions were repeatedly asked and not answered as to whether or not the Vice President’s office is a part of the Administration.

Is there any precedent for this?

I was referencing a White House press briefing (the subject of the diary). The response to that comment came from Federalist X and was, in part, as follows:

the VP is actually NOT a member of the executive office. look at the constitution. he’s an officer of the senate. his constitutional power, to preside over the senate, is found ONLY in the article I (i.e., the legislature).

presidents have moved around this by granting officer commissions to the VPs staff, eg. libby was an officer of the executive branch AND the VP’s office. but the VP’s office, constitutionally at least, is a part of the LEGISLATURE.

Do you see where I’m going with this? Cheney denies that anyone in the Administration misled the American people. Cheney, Constitutionally speaking, is not a member of the Administration.

Bush commented on Cheney’s speech in this article in The Washington Post:

“I agree with the vice president,” Bush said Thursday in South Korea when asked about Cheney’s remarks. “I think people ought to be allowed to ask questions. It is irresponsible to say that I deliberately misled the American people.

“What bothers me is when people are irresponsibly using their positions and playing politics,” Bush added. “That’s exactly what is taking place in America.”

My emphasis added.  It’s entirely possible that, on a technicality, the President is telling the truth and the Vice President is telling the truth while giving himself legal cover. The fact that it could have been the Vice President misleading America, in turn, gives the Administration cover.

I suppose it depends on what the meaning of the word “IS” is, though.

"Hey Pot – You’re Black." –Love, Kettle

(Cross-posted at Daily Kos, My Left Wing and my blog)

Well. It appears that the President, who decries the idea that he follows the polls, is dreaming about low poll numbers. How else do you explain the fact that he has given two very defensive speeches in five days?

The first speech was given on Veteran’s Day in Tobyhanna, Pennsylvania. Bush said:

While it’s perfectly legitimate to criticize my decision or the conduct of the war, it is deeply irresponsible to rewrite the history of how that war began. (Applause.) Some Democrats and anti-war critics are now claiming we manipulated the intelligence and misled the American people about why we went to war. These critics are fully aware that a bipartisan Senate investigation found no evidence of political pressure to change the intelligence community’s judgments related to Iraq’s weapons programs.

(Speech Transcript)

Just to be clear, the bipartisan investigation he references was as to whether or not intelligence analysts and agencies were pressured to deliver a certain type of intelligence. That is vastly different than an investigation into the use of that intelligence by the White House.

Make the jump.
Remarkably, the speech went on to reference Bush’s “opponent”, John Kerry, without specifically mentioning him by name:

They also know that intelligence agencies from around the world agreed with our assessment of Saddam Hussein. They know the United Nations passed more than a dozen resolutions citing his development and possession of weapons of mass destruction. And many of these critics supported my opponent during the last election, who explained his position to support the resolution in the Congress this way: “When I vote to give the President of the United States the authority to use force, if necessary, to disarm Saddam Hussein, it is because I believe that a deadly arsenal of weapons of mass destruction in his hands is a threat, and a grave threat, to our security.” That’s why more than a hundred Democrats in the House and the Senate — who had access to the same intelligence — voted to support removing Saddam Hussein from power.

So pot, I, the kettle, accuse you of being black.  The argument seems to be “Well the intelligence was wrong, but YOU thought it was right just like I did.  I shouldn’t be blamed.”  Give me a break.

As John King said on CNN, (paraphrased) you’re not in a good position when you’re still debating your opponent nearly a year after the election was concluded. I’ll say also that not very much honoring was going on from that podium on Veteran’s Day. It was a crass attempt to boost sagging support for the war in Iraq and one that was delivered in the most inappropriate context.  I’m not alone in thinking it was inapprpriate.  This editorial from OregonLive.com sums it up:

As a disabled Vietnam War veteran, I took exception to President Bush’s Tobyhanna, Pa., Veterans Day speech (“Bush defends war, faults critics,” Nov. 12).

Veterans Day is a day for recognizing those who have served and those who are serving the United States of America. It is not a day for a stump speech that further divides our country, or a day about salvaging political capital.

During the day, I reflected on my father, who served as a Marine in Nicaragua before World War II; my half-brother, who served in the Korean War, and another brother, who served in Italy during the Vietnam era.

We were among the lucky ones — we returned home and started families and careers. Many of the sailors and soldiers I served with when I was in the Navy did not return. I weep for those who gave their lives in their service to our country.

President Bush needs to be reminded that he did not stand side by side with his fellow soldiers when he had the opportunity more than three decades ago [while serving in the Texas Air National Guard].

He remains a no-show as he sends our troops to a war we cannot win, with him “standing behind” our troops in more ways than one.

Now from his speech in Alaska on Sunday at a stopover en route to Asia:

But we’ve got a bigger task than that. One of the most dangerous things that can happen to the future of our nation is that these kind of terrorist organizations hook up with nations that develop weapons of mass destruction. One of the worst things that could possibly happen to freedom-loving people, whether it be the United States or our friends or allies, is to allow nations that have got a dark history and an ugly past to develop weapons of mass destruction like nuclear weapons or chemical weapons, or biological weapons which could, for example, be delivered by long-range missile, to become a part of the terrorist network. And there are such nations in the world.

(Speech Transcript)

Oh really? “One of the most important”? Why, then, did the 9/11 Commission only yesterday issue a report characterizing the US’ efforts to thwart nuclear weapons proliferation as “minimal” at best and “insufficient” at worst? From the Commission:

“The most striking thing to us is that the size of the problem still totally dwarfs the policy response .”

Thomas Kean – Chairman of the 9/11 Public Discourse Project

Well I feel safer. There were other interesting snippets in this article from the BBC:

“Preventing terrorists from gaining access to weapons of national security must be elevated above all other problems of national security,” the group said.

–snip–

The government “should work with its allies to develop mutually acceptable standards for terrorist detention”, it said.

Lee Hamilton – who was co-chairman of the disbanded commission – added that “detainee abuse in Abu Ghraib, Guantanamo and elsewhere undermines America’s reputation as a moral leader”.

Gee – ya think? Note to self: Torture isn’t a good way to a) receive reliable information; or b) win hearts and minds among allies OR enemies.

The lead story on MSNBC and CNN’s 7pm and 8pm news broadcasts last night. was the new “all-time low” approval ratings for the President – 37%. And although the Democratic version a proposal in the Senate today was defeated, Republicans are distancing themselves from this unpopular President and his unpopular war. From CNN Online:

On the question of a timetable for troop withdrawal, senators rejected the Democrats’ measure by 58-40. Democratic leaders had advanced the timetable measure in the wake of declining public support for a conflict that has claimed more than 2,000 U.S. lives and cost more than $200 billion.

Republicans countered with their own non-binding alternative. It urged that 2006 “should be a period of significant transition to full Iraqi sovereignty,” with Iraqi forces taking the lead in providing security to create the conditions for the phased redeployment of United States forces.

On a 79-19 vote, the Senate approved that GOP-sponsored proposal, which did not call for the president to put forth a withdrawal timetable unlike the Democratic proposal.

“They want an exit strategy, a cut-and-run exit strategy. What we are for is a successful strategy,” said Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tennessee.

Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid, D-Nevada, said: “We want to change the course. We can’t stay the course.”

Tuesday’s fast-paced developments underscored the political significance of the war as the U.S. death toll climbs, public support plummets, the insurgency continues and the price tag soars with no end in sight.

The Senate added the GOP Iraq policy to the Defense spending bill for fiscal year 2006, which was approved Tuesday afternoon 98-0.

While it falls short of accountability of the type I would like to see, the Republican statement on a “period of transition” is by far better than the cheerleading we have seen in the past. Republican Senators are leaving themselves substantial room for further distancing in the run-up to the 2006 mid-term elections.

Any bets on when the President hits the 20’s? Sooner would be better than later – it may save some lives.

In memoriam.

(Cross-posted at Daily Kos and My Left Wing)

I read a lot of diaries.  I very much enjoy the points of view, intelligent commentary and generally respectful discourse that occurs here.

There is always an undercurrent here and at dKos as to the failing role of the mainstream media.  Generally I agree with it.  The Corporate Media are profit-focused and not issued focused.  They have largely turned their back on their solemn duty to act as the fourth estate.  

But here’s the thing – we may revile them, but the media are important.  We can’t get around that.  We need them – whether they’re on our side or not.  We need them to be more – our safety, well-being and security are at stake if they are not more.  How much more?

Make the jump.
Read and consider.  Bolded items are my emphasis added.

Seeking neither approbation from my employers, nor new sponsors, nor acclaim from the critics of radio and television, I cannot well be disappointed. Believing that potentially the commercial system of broadcasting as practiced in this country is the best and freest yet devised, I have decided to express my concern about what I believe to be happening to radio and television. These instruments have been good to me beyond my due. There exists in mind no reasonable grounds for personal complaint. I have no feud, either with my employers, any sponsors, or with the professional critics of radio and television. But I am seized with an abiding fear regarding what these two instruments are doing to our society, our culture and our heritage.

Our history will be what we make it. And if there are any historians about fifty or a hundred years from now, and there should be preserved the kinescopes for one week of all three networks, they will there find recorded in black and white, or color, evidence of decadence, escapism and insulation from the realities of the world in which we live. I invite your attention to the television schedules of all networks between the hours of 8 and 11 p.m., Eastern Time. Here you will find only fleeting and spasmodic reference to the fact that this nation is in mortal danger. There are, it is true, occasional informative programs presented in that intellectual ghetto on Sunday afternoons. But during the daily peak viewing periods, television in the main insulates us from the realities of the world in which we live. If this state of affairs continues, we may alter an advertising slogan to read: LOOK NOW, PAY LATER.

For surely we shall pay for using this most powerful instrument of communication to insulate the citizenry from the hard and demanding realities which must be faced if we are to survive. I mean the word survive literally. If there were to be a competition in indifference, or perhaps in insulation from reality, then Nero and his fiddle, Chamberlain and his umbrella, could not find a place on an early afternoon sustaining show. If Hollywood were to run out of Indians, the program schedules would be mangled beyond all recognition. Then some courageous soul with a small budget might be able to do a documentary telling what, in fact, we have done–and are still doing–to the Indians in this country. But that would be unpleasant. And we must at all costs shield the sensitive citizens from anything that is unpleasant.

I am entirely persuaded that the American public is more reasonable, restrained and more mature than most of our industry’s program planners believe. Their fear of controversy is not warranted by the evidence. I have reason to know, as do many of you, that when the evidence on a controversial subject is fairly and calmly presented, the public recognizes it for what it is–an effort to illuminate rather than to agitate.

(snip)

One of the basic troubles with radio and television news is that both instruments have grown up as an incompatible combination of show business, advertising and news. Each of the three is a rather bizarre and demanding profession. And when you get all three under one roof, the dust never settles. The top management of the networks with a few notable exceptions, has been trained in advertising, research, sales or show business. But by the nature of the coporate structure, they also make the final and crucial decisions having to do with news and public affairs. Frequently they have neither the time nor the competence to do this. It is not easy for the same small group of men to decide whether to buy a new station for millions of dollars, build a new building, alter the rate card, buy a new Western, sell a soap opera, decide what defensive line to take in connection with the latest Congressional inquiry, how much money to spend on promoting a new program, what additions or deletions should be made in the existing covey or clutch of vice-presidents, and at the same time– frequently on the same long day–to give mature, thoughtful consideration to the manifold problems that confront those who are charged with the responsibility for news and public affairs.

Sometimes there is a clash between the public interest and the corporate interest. A telephone call or a letter from the proper quarter in Washington is treated rather more seriously than a communication from an irate but not politically potent viewer. It is tempting enough to give away a little air time for frequently irresponsible and unwarranted utterances in an effort to temper the wind of criticism.

(snip)

I am frightened by the imbalance, the constant striving to reach the largest possible audience for everything; by the absence of a sustained study of the state of the nation. Heywood Broun once said, “No body politic is healthy until it begins to itch.” I would like television to produce some itching pills rather than this endless outpouring of tranquilizers. It can be done. Maybe it won’t be, but it could. Let us not shoot the wrong piano player. Do not be deluded into believing that the titular heads of the networks control what appears on their networks. They all have better taste. All are responsible to stockholders, and in my experience all are honorable men. But they must schedule what they can sell in the public market.

(snip)

To those who say people wouldn’t look; they wouldn’t be interested; they’re too complacent, indifferent and insulated, I can only reply: There is, in one reporter’s opinion, considerable evidence against that contention. But even if they are right, what have they got to lose? Because if they are right, and this instrument is good for nothing but to entertain, amuse and insulate, then the tube is flickering now and we will soon see that the whole struggle is lost.

This instrument can teach, it can illuminate; yes, and it can even inspire. But it can do so only to the extent that humans are determined to use it to those ends. Otherwise it is merely wires and lights in a box. There is a great and perhaps decisive battle to be fought against ignorance, intolerance and indifference. This weapon of television could be useful.

Stonewall Jackson, who knew something about the use of weapons, is reported to have said, “When war comes, you must draw the sword and throw away the scabbard.” The trouble with television is that it is rusting in the scabbard during a battle for survival.

–Edward R. Murrow – October 15, 1958, in a speech to the Radio-Television News Directors Association Convention

THAT much more.  The full text of the speech can be found here and it’s well worth reading.

A few of the terms and references date this 47-year old speech – but not many.  The language, the intent, and the concern could be picked up and deposited in whole to today’s mainstream media.  Our problem is that we don’t have an Edward R. Murrow to speak them.

If you haven’t seen the film version of Good Night and Good Luck, it’s well worth it.  I’m 38.  Murrow was way before my time.  But I am fortunate enough to have had articulate and intelligent parents and teachers who educated me on the importance of reviewing history and abosorbing its meaning… As my husband and I left the theater today, I wondered at how many people, today, don’t know how much courage it took for Murrow, Friendly and their crew to do what they did in taking on Joe McCarthy… People lost their reputations to McCarthy.  They lost their livelihoods.  Some, in despair, lost their lives.  It was a serious thing to take this person on – it cost the network and everyone associated with Murrow’s work, both monetarily and otherwise.

But they did it anyway.  On the conviction of Murrow’s conscience and on the back of his reputation, they did it.

In Memoriam: Edward R. Murrow (April 25, 1908 – April 27, 1965).

In Search Of: His Replacement.  This is what we should demand of our media.

My New Heroes.

(Cross-posted at Daily Kos, my blog, and My Left Wing)

I have two new heroes as of this past weekend.

One is a Palestinian family and the other is a group of 23 teenaged girls. Come with me while I tell you a bit of their stories and why I think they are heroes.

More after the flip.
Although this isn’t a diary about politics, it is essentially political because of the circumstances and the lives of the people’s story I will try to tell.

It’s no surprise to anyone who even infrequently follows the news that violence is a way of life for Israelis and Palestinians. This violence doesn’t discriminate by gender or by age. Last week, it was a 12-year old Palestinian boy caught in the crossfire. On Wednesday, Ahmed al-Khatib was doing what 12-year old boys of any nationality in any country do – he was playing. Sadly for him, he was playing with a plastic gun that Israeli troops mistook for a real weapon – they opened fire. Ahmed was rushed to the hospital where he received care and the good doctors and nurses attempted to save his young life. On Saturday, Ahmed died of his wounds.

Now for the heroic and remarkable part.  To see Ahmed’s parents you would be put in mind of any parent anywhere on this planet who had just lost a child they loved. They were and are grief stricken. It would make sense to me that they would blame the Israelis for the loss of their son – he was only a twelve-year old boy, for God’s sake.  And in their own hearts, in the privacy of their grief, they may feel that. But their actions defy that particular reality. Ahmed’s parents made the decision to donate his organs so that, in his death, others might live.

The recipients of this precious gift of life, one only possible through the tragedy of death? Six Israelis. A seven-month old Israeli baby and a 58-year old Israeli woman received his liver. 14-year old and 4-year old Israeli children received his kidneys. A 5-year old Israeli child received his lungs. And a 12-year old Israeli child received his heart. All six of these lives, these human lives, are recovering and will have a chance at the life that Ahmed lost.

From the article, this was worth quoting:

Khatib said the decision to donate his son Ahmed’s organs for transplant stemmed from a desire to answer violence with a concrete gesture of peace.

“I have taken this decision because I have a message for the world: that the Palestinian people want peace – for everyone,” he said on Sunday.

“We have no problem whether it is an Israeli or a Palestinian (who receives his organs) because it will give them life,” said the boy’s mother, Ablah al-Khatib.

My second hero is not a person but a group – of 23 high-school aged girls who understand their own dignity and integrity, as well as their faith in their powwer to effect change. I originally wrote about this particular story at the Boycott Thieves blog, as one small example of the power of people with conviction.

These girls have decided to start a “girl-cott” against Abercrombie and Fitch, a higher-end retailer that relies specifically on the teen and young adult markets. What has them angry? A series of T-shirts that Abercrombie and Fitch call “Attitude Tees”. Here are a few of the slogans that “Attitude Tees” feature:

  • Who needs brains when you have these? (Note: These words are stretched across the wearer’s chest)
  • Blondes are adored, brunettes are ignored.
  • I make you look fat.

As a musician and a woman who works professionally in a very male-dominated world, I can tell you that I have a pretty thick skin. These T-shirts? Just… awful. In a world that insists that female beauty falls within such narrow confines and in which young women struggle through all the messages they receive in the media and in society as to their value, these shirts are disgusting.

The 23 girls felt the same way and undertook an organized effort to discourage peers and friends from shopping at Abercrombie and Fitch. Further, the Woman and Girls Foundation of Western Pennsylvania are assisting the girls, and last week, NBC’s Today Show picked up the story. From there the media dominoes fell – CNN, MSNBC, ABC, all the major TV news outlets picked up and ran the story.

On Friday of last week, Ambercrombie and Fitch agreed to pull some of the “Attitude Tees” from their shelves. Score one for a small, principled group of teenage girls with a solid sense of themselves and what’s demeaning and offensive.

So now, my thoughts – I’ll try to keep them brief.

As I watched the story about the Palestinian family, I found myself becoming incredibly emotional. For one thing, the grief on that mother’s face was so essentially human that I couldn’t help but be moved. More importantly, though, this one small gesture by this one family that gave their dead son’s organs so that others might live, the same ‘others’ who may in turn hate Palestinians gave me a vision of the person I would like to be.  A person who can transcend my own shortcomings and fears and biases and stand on principle.  Their principle was peace – for everyone. The platform was the death of their son and the gift of life they decided to grant to six other people so that their principles would be served, even in tragedy.

I only hope that when the time comes for me to stand up – to mean it and to lead by example, that I can set half of the example that this family did.

They are heroid.

The 23 teenaged girls are my heroes because they reinvigorated me to a few things that I always believed but that I’ve lost sight of during this horrible, uncaring Administration. One, your one small voice, standing on principle and on the side of right, matters.  It matters all the time in everything you do.  Perhaps The Today Show would have never heard the story – had the news cycle been different their story may have never come to light. But they would still touch each other in their efforts and touch those around them. Someone will notice – maybe one someone or maybe tens of thousands of someones. That simple willingness to stand up holds, for me, a profound sense of hope and a renewed spirit of perseverence.

The second thing the “girl-cott” did was renew my willingness to take on giant corporations that perpetrate injustice and to stick to it – always. No excuses. I don’t shop at Wal-Mart. I won’t shop at Wal-Mart. I tell people that I don’t and why I won’t. Maybe they will still go there, and maybe they won’t. But I won’t be quiet about it. I won’t go to Exxon/Mobil for gas. Or gum. Or sodas. Or anything. If those girls can make a difference, so can I and Exxon isn’t getting another dime of my money.

Heroes are all shapes and sizes, all nationalities and genders, all ages. These are just two of mine – I hope you found them as inspiring and I did.