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 Padilla Quote: 
 While the Dems are singing and handwringing over putting panties on terrorists head, John Q. Public yawns and wonders why we aren't sticking a hot poker up his anus and electrocuting his balls. While the Dems are blustering and filibustering over the renewal of the Patriot Act, John Q. Public wants to know why Democrats so hate the country that they would prefer another terrorist attack than let the GOP do their job. While the Dems are leaking and shrieking about "secret" foreign detention cells, John Q. Public wonders why we aren't summarily executing these cretins to begin with. And now, while the Dems are screeching and threatening impeaching over perfectly legal and highly precedented wiretaps of potential terrorists, John Q. Public wonders why Democrats are more concerned about the privacy of murderers than of allowing the government to gather important preventive intelligence. If you Demwits keep up this pace of distancing yourselves from public opinion, the Greens may overtake you in 2008. | 
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 No surprize here but I am confused again..... Quote: 
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 If I detain you, and ask you questions without letting you know your rights anything you say can be used against you. Not the same with Cops. Why? Because of our fear of government. Our system puts rights above truth and justice because of our fear of government. In addition, freedom and rights are not synonymous. Quote: 
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 The message the English had for the Northern Irish Catholics was and is perfectly clear: they are subhumans who don't deserve basic human rights. They will be fucked with and fucked over because, well, they're not English after all. Just dirty Micks. The Irish troubles went from a short-term flareup to a thirty year clusterfuck because of the exact same tactics you are now advocating. So take your exigent circumstances and shove them. | 
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 Senility before turning 40? I couldn't find my wallet for twenty four hours.  Started to freak out.  I just found it in my sock drawer.  The crazy thing is I don't even smoke crack.  My friend said that one time he couldn't find his wallet and it turned up in his refrigerator.  However, in his defense, he smoked a lot of pot in college. | 
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 Senility before turning 40? Quote: 
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 No surprize here but I am confused again..... Quote: 
 Not the part about you getting blamed, but the other stuff. | 
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 No surprize here but I am confused again..... Quote: 
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 Padilla Quote: 
 I do not view the argument being made right now by Bush (directly and through Mr. Cheney) as a conservative/liberal argument, but instead as an argument between advocates of a strong executive and advocates of individual rights. Mr. Chinaski's hypo is a good example. He is essentially saying that current law is inadequate to address the threat, and thus what is needed is strong governmental authority with discretion to act as they wish, unlimited by the legal system. I do not like this approach at all, and I would suggest that in our system if the laws are inadequate what is needed are new laws. Given that President Bush has a majority in both houses, he should be able to put in place the laws that are necessary to do this right. However, I also think Mr. Chinaski's hypothetical can be addressed under current law. The Saudis carrying box-cutters may have been conspiring to attempt murder (with a number of counts equal to the individuals on board the airplane, minimum, or the number of people inside the World Trade Center or Pentagon, maximum) or doing any number of other things. Yes, the government will need to show more than just carrying box-cutters. But, with the box-cutter wielders identified and in custody, presumably a case can be built. If it cannot, then, yes, they should go free (though certainly not free in this country given the suspicion - I would expect passports to be revoked). Internationally, we must abide by the Geneva Convention and by treaties we are a party to; domestically and with respect to US persons wherever they are (IMHO), we need to abide by the constitution. Given how many have fought for those rights over such a protracted period of time, is there anything wrong with that standard? I have not heard the President disavow these standards, though I am waiting to see if the acts that have occurred effectively disregard the standard, which would not be acceptable behavior. | 
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 Padilla Quote: 
 The facts have not yet settled down, and are very confusing, but I am not sure I would use the British as an example of anything until this is sorted out. | 
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 No surprize here but I am confused again..... Quote: 
 But only if the administration honestly thinks, in their unfettered discretion, that it is a good idea. Look, of course we are fighting a different kind of enemy, and we certainly need to do things differently in many ways than we have been since the mid-1970s. That said, lets have honest and open debates on the issues rather than secret assumptions of power, and (I say) let's hold onto the fundamental principles that made America that "shining city on a hill." The failures leading to 9/11 were caused by definciencies in policies re intelligence-gathering, a severe lack of human intelligence capability and a refusal by government and industry to take basic protective measures -- not the lack of warrantless wiretaps on U.S. citizens, the inability to torture prisoners, and/or the inability to hold U.S. and/or foreign citizens in custody indefinitely with no charge and no access to counsel. Doesn't anyone else find it a bit ironic that I am the one here arguing for limited governmental power and quoting Reagan? S_A_M | 
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 No surprize here but I am confused again..... Quote: 
 But, yes, it will be held against you for some time to come. | 
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 No surprize here but I am confused again..... Quote: 
 So why can't we try to learn a little bit from the past this time? | 
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 No surprize here but I am confused again..... Quote: 
 And guess what, most of these guys don't do anything illegal until the airplane has been hijacked or the bomb assembled. Yes Captain it would be nice if we could put together a nice conspiracy case together- but conspiracy to do what? Bring box cutters on a plane? Why prosecute Atta but not my kid? All I'm saying is that for certain of these people, letting them on the street is not an attractive option. Yes it would be nice if laws caught up, and maybe there are some better laws that could provide help- but right now- today Padilla or whoever else wants to kill thousands of us. That is the dilemma facing people who are holding these guys. It's like capturing an enemy airplane loaded with bombs, questioning the pilot and saying "we have to let him have his plane back because we can't prove he is on the other side." You all act like that dilemma isn't hard, or real. | 
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