That liberal Hollywood is at it again. Next Friday, they’re coming out with more anti-Bush propaganda. It’s a movie called "Curious George", about a "monkey" who sticks his nose into other people’s business. Already, billboards are popping up in major cities showing George with a pair of binoculars. Unbelievable. [Hat tip: Will Bunch]
Bush Not Cooperating With Senate Investigation
Surprise, surprise: The Bush administration is rebuffing requests from members of the Senate Judiciary Committee for its classified legal opinions on President Bush’s domestic spying program, setting up a confrontation in advance of a hearing scheduled for next week, administration and Congressional officials said Wednesday. The Justice Department is balking at the request so far, administration officials said, arguing that … Read More
Clintonism In MilInt
I’m a reasonably smart man, and I understand that the English is not an exact science, but this strikes me as utter bullshit. From Congressional Quarterly: “Contrary to popular belief, there is no absolute ban on [military] intelligence components collecting U.S. person information,” the U.S.Army’s top intelligence officer said in a 2001 memo that surfaced Tuesday. Not only that, military … Read More
Et Tu, Grover?
Grover Norquist, father of the neo-conservative movement, leading anti-tax advocate, and extreme war-on-terror hawk, commented on Bush’s "terrorist surveillance program" vs. upholding civil liberties : "It’s not either/or. If the president thinks he needs different tools, pass a law to get them. Don’t break the existing laws." Ouch. Why does Norquist hate America? UPDATE: Guess what? This is my 2000th … Read More
Where I Come From, We Call It “Perjury”
January, 2000 — Alberto Gonzales Confirmation Hearing: SEN. SPECTER: Judge Gonzales, would you now stand for the administration of the oath? Raise your right hand. Do you solemnly swear that the testimony you will give before the Senate Judiciary Committee will be the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth, so help you God? MR. GONZALES: I do. … Read More
Palace Revolt
Newsweek has an investigation into brave people within the Justice Department — Bush appointees — who took quiet but strong issue with the excesses of the Bush Administration in surveillance. A snippet: The rebels were not whistle-blowers in the traditional sense. They did not want—indeed avoided—publicity. …They were not downtrodden career civil servants. Rather, they were conservative political appointees who … Read More
WaPo Editorial Nails It
I’m glad it’s being said: The Bush administration’s distortion, for political purposes, of the Democratic position on warrantless surveillance is loathsome. Despite the best efforts of Karl Rove, the White House deputy chief of staff, and Ken Mehlman, the Republican National Committee chairman, to make it seem otherwise, Democrats are not opposed to vigorous, effective surveillance that could uncover terrorist … Read More
DeWine Amendment Story Gets Some Traction
One of the most annoying things about the blogosphere, in my opinion, is the over-inflated sense that many political bloggers believe of their impact. But the gumshoe research by blogger Glenn Greenwald shows that, in his case, the praise he is now getting is 100% justified. That’s why, when I first read Glenn’s revelation two days ago, I blogged "This … Read More
Poll: More Americans Favor Impeachment
I saw a re-run of "The West Wing" from the first season recently. That would have aired in 1998 or 1999. In it, one of the characters says the following, which I paraphrase: Josh, if there’s one thing that history has shown us, it’s that the real theat to democracy doesn’t come from radical lunatics. It comes from those in … Read More
The Bush Administration Was Against A Lower Standard For Warrantless Wiretapping Before It Was For It
This is big. Again, Glenn Greenwald scores a hit. As noted below, the Bush Administration (through Hayden) now explains that the reason that wiretaps were sought outside FISA was because it couldn’t meet the "probable cause" standard. Glenn discovered an historical, documented problem with this argument. In June, 2002, Republican Sen. Michael DeWine of Ohio introduced legislation (S. 2659) which … Read More
Cool
Political Wire: "The Bush administration is bracing for impeachment hearings in Congress," Insight magazine reports. "Sources said a prelude to the impeachment process could begin with hearings by the Senate Judiciary Committee in February. They said the hearings would focus on the secret electronic surveillance program and whether Mr. Bush violated the 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act." Said the source: … Read More
Garden-Variety Wiretapping
One of the reasonable defenses of the NSA wiretapping — perhaps the only reasonable defense offered by the neocons — was that the "wiretapping" simply wasn’t "wiretapping" as we know it. According to conservative pundits, what the NSA was doing was emplying novel technologies which enable our intelligence boys to do "data-mining", where thousands (if not millions) of phone calls … Read More
NSA Wiretapping: Illegal No Matter How You Splice It
The White House has defended its warrantless-search program with essentially two silly arguments: (1) Congress’ 9/11 resolution ("Authorization to Use Military Force") empowered Bush to do this, and (2) Congress was briefed so oversight requirements had been met. Two weeks ago, the non-partisan Congressional Research Service rejected the administration’s first argument. Yesterday, the CRS rejected the second: The Bush administration … Read More
Connecting The Dots
Michelle Malkin: "You can’t connect the dots if you don’t gather them." Kevin Drum, Matt Yglesius, the FBI and many others too numerous to mention: "If you gather way too many useless dots, you can’t connect anything correctly."
Attorney General Alberto Gonzales Is Either A Bad Lawyer Or A Liar
From last night’s CNN interview by Larry King of Attorney General Alberto Gonzalez: KING: General, isn’t there a happy medium? Isn’t there a way to get quickly to a judge who signs off on a warrant to tap or listen in? Isn’t there a way to do that quick? GONZALES: Larry, whenever you involve another branch of government in an … Read More