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No surprize here but I am confused again.....
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To use Slave's favorite Clash quote: When they kick down your door, how you gonna come? With your hands in the air or on the trigger of a gun? |
No surprize here but I am confused again.....
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No surprize here but I am confused again.....
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No surprize here but I am confused again.....
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No surprize here but I am confused again.....
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(1) Mr. Chinaski has not told us his proposal, that is, what he would change, suspend or alter in the Constitution or in our system. (2) No one else seems to be supporting Mr. Chinaski's position. It seems everyone else here believes in our system of government. I realize that we all enjoy knocking down straw men on occassion, and even setting them afire when they are on the ground, and Mr Chinaski's posts set him up as a fine straw man. Hank, would you like to put a little flesh and bones in place of the straw and actually tell us what you want to change? Perhaps then someone will have something to agree with. Edited to Add: I posted too late. We do have a proposal! It looks like a straw man. Who has a match? |
No surprize here but I am confused again.....
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No surprize here but I am confused again.....
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No surprize here but I am confused again.....
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No surprize here but I am confused again.....
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No surprize here but I am confused again.....
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Or is it just the people whom we freed from tyranny you wish to punish? |
No surprize here but I am confused again.....
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No surprize here but I am confused again.....
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But I think it is more than "nice" _if_ the laws catch up. It is vital that the laws catch up, because we are a nation of laws. Therefore, it is vital that the administration go through the process of a public debate and appropriate legislation to the extent they think we need to change the way we do things. I think they also need to not play games with the legal challenges to try to avoid Court rulings on their policies -- which they have done with Padilla, and did with Hamdi. Good God -- when a man like Luttig slams the administration for playing games you know there is a problem. One of the bottom lines, Hank -- is that there is _always_ a backlash and a reversal of policies over time. The backlash is made harsher when the G is seen as being unduly secretive, abusive and/or authoritarian. So, even those who agree with the policy should see that it is not in the best interests of the country -- long-term, for the G to handle it that way. You can see what may be the beginnings of it now, when the GOP has a 55-45 Senate advantage, but there are enough Republican defections to defeat efforts to permanently extend the Patriot Act, the President is forced to accede to a ban on torture, at least three GOP Senators have called for hearings on the wiretapping program, and other Presidential priorities (ANWR and/or budget cuts) either go down to defeat or require Cheney to break a tie. If the backlash from Watergate and the abuses under Nixon led to the Church commission and a backlash which resulted in a long-term degradation of our intelligence capabilities, it seems to me that we would want to avoid similar abuses to avoid a similar backlash this time around. S_A_M |
No surprize here but I am confused again.....
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As a legal mattter -- it is a crime. As a practical matter, it is both. S_A_M |
No surprize here but I am confused again.....
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No surprize here but I am confused again.....
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He is more willing than you are to trade some freedom for some security, and would draw the line differently than you. I'd probably draw it in a third location. That doesn't mean any of us hate America, or freedom, or Mom, or apple pie. One problem, though is that once you trade some freedom, its damn tough to get it back. S_A_M |
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