Category Archives: Bush’s Watergate On Steroids

A Disenfranchised Heather Gold Speaks For A Lot Of Us

Heather Gold explains (in graphic detail) what Bush would have to do to actually be impeached.

But first, she accurately expresses the feeling of disenfranchisement that many Americans feel these days at being powerless to stop or do anything to hold the Shrub responsible for his illegal actions.

In this case, feeling helpless after finding out that the Shrub personally authorized Scooter Libby to conduct the treasonous act of leaking the identity CIA agent Valerie Plame’s identity to the press, and realize no one’s going to do a damn thing about it.

But Heather, take heart, Patrick Fitzgerald may be on the case!

Repubs Starting To Split Off From Shrub Over Domestic Spying Issue

This article is from February 5, 2006.
Well all right. Between the Domestic Spying controversy and having Cindy Sheehan arrested at the State of the Union for wearing a shirt (more on this later, oh yes, much more on this later…) Bush is backing himself into a beautiful corner.
Now the couple of Republicans with a little backbone are showing it off. Folks that turn up consistently on civil rights issues and things, like Bob Barr, Lindsay Graham, and …. (surprise! surprise!) Arlen Specter! They don’t want to go down with the ship.
So much for political captal bushy boy. Me thinks you done used it all up.

On Eve of Hearing, Split on Spying

By Charlie Savage for The Boston Globe
via
t r u t h o u t

As hearings begin tomorrow on President Bush’s domestic spying program, increasing numbers of prominent conservatives are breaking with the administration to say the program is probably illegal and to sharply criticize Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales’s legal theory that a wartime president can override a law.
The skeptics include leaders of conservative activist groups, well-known law professors, veterans of Republican administrations, former GOP members of Congress, and think tank analysts. The conservatives said they are speaking out because they object to the White House’s attempt to portray criticism of the program as partisan attacks…

Some of the conservative critics, such as Grover Norquist of Americans for Tax Reform, contend that Bush should simply comply with the law requiring the government to obtain a court order when it wants to wiretap an American. Bush’s aides have asserted that warrants take too long to obtain, but Norquist said the law allows investigators to plant a wiretap first and seek permission up to three days later.

“There is no excuse for violating the rule of law,” Norquist said. “You can listen to [suspects] and get the warrant afterward. Not to do that appears to be an expression of contempt for the idea of warrants.”

Larry Pratt, executive director of Gun Owners of America, said that if investigators need more time to fill out the warrant application, Congress should change the law to extend the deadline. But, he said, court orders ought to remain part of the process to ensure that government surveillance power is never used against the political enemies of whomever is in power…

Other conservative critics, such as David Keene, the chairman of the American Conservative Union – which calls itself the largest grass-roots conservative organization in the country – say the president should simply get the House and Senate to approve the program, rather than assert a right to bypass Congress in times of war.

“Their argument is extremely dangerous in the long term because it can be used to justify all kinds of things that I’m sure neither the president nor the attorney general has thought about,” Keene said. A president “could just do whatever [he] wants to do. . . . The American system was set up on the assumption that you can’t rely on the good will of people with power.”

Bruce Fein, a former Justice Department official under President Reagan, said that under Bush’s theory a president could authorize internment camps for groups of US citizens he deems suspicious. Congress outlawed such camps after President Franklin D. Roosevelt interned Japanese-Americans in World War II. But under Bush’s theory, the president could invoke his wartime powers to override the law in the name of protecting national security, Fein said.

“It’s Bush’s defenders who are embracing the most liberal and utopian view of human nature with their ‘trust me’ argument, a view that would cause the Founding Fathers to weep,” Fein said. “The real conservatives are the ones who treasure the original understanding of the Constitution, and clearly this is inconsistent with the separation of powers.”

Some conservatives defend the legality of the surveillance program. Among the most prominent has been David Rivkin, a former associate White House counsel in the administration of George H.W. Bush, who has recently found himself debating a series of conservatives who used to be his allies.

Rivkin said his fellow conservatives who call the surveillance program illegal are mostly libertarians and other believers in small government. The critics, he said, do not believe that the war on terrorism is a real war and that the nature of terrorism requires treating the home front like a battlefield….

Rivkin also rejected Fein’s contention that if Bush’s legal theory is correct, a president also could authorize internment camps. He said the president can do things that are normal parts of war, including conducting military surveillance. But it would still be illegal to detain citizens who aren’t enemy combatants, he said.

But Robert Levy of the libertarian Cato Institute said conducting surveillance on US soil without a warrant is one of the things that Bush cannot do, even in wartime, because Congress passed a law making it a criminal offense to wiretap Americans without a warrant, even in national security circumstances.

“If we had silence by Congress on warrants, then the administration’s position would be more powerful,” Levy said. “But the president is acting contrary to the expressed will of Congress. That is what renders this program most legally suspect.”

Richard Epstein, a prominent conservative law professor at the University of Chicago, said Rivkin and the other defenders of the president’s legal theory are misreading the Constitution. The president has broad powers to take immediate steps to counter an invasion, he said, but has little authority to defy the will of Congress after an initial emergency has receded.

Bob Barr, a onetime Republican representative from Georgia and a former prosecutor, said the issue is whether the president can violate a law, not whether this particular program makes sense from a policy perspective in the war on terrorism.

Said Barr, “If the American people see the conservative movement rolling over and playing dead and buying into these specious arguments by the administration – that it’s OK to violate the law as long as you do it for the right reasons and because we might have a president that we like – then the credibility of the conservative movement on other issues will suffer greatly.”

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Watergate On Steriods – The Truth About Bush’s Domestic Spying Program

The Watchers: Maria Hinojosa on NOW – The Truth About Bush’s Domestic Spying Program
This is from the January 13, 2006 episode of NOW.
Link to NOW website on this story, which includes documents a plenty backing up all the facts mentioned below (and much more).
So really things are getting pretty interesting.
On the one hand we have the Vice President’s right hand man Scooter Libby indicted by the Justice Department for leaking CIA Agent Valerie Plame’s identity.
We have Republican House Leader Tom DeLay having to step down in the face of his indictments in Texas.
We have “Bush Pioneer” Jack Abramoff pleading guilty to various money laundering and fraud charges, and in the process revealing the names of 60 or more other corrupt Republicans that were in on the racket.
But now, it would appear we have something like “Watergate On Steroids.”
This isn’t some office break-in that the President “knew” about via smoke filled rooms. This is an executive order straight from Bush himself self-authorizing a no-warrants-necessary domestic spying program.
Perhaps you saw Condi Rice on Meet The Press a few weeks ago making absolutely no sense whatsoever. She cites FISA (the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act) as the reason for the President’s authority to issue no-warrant spying. In reality, of course, FISA is actually the reason we can conclude so easily that the President so clearly broke the law; If he had obtained FISA warrants for his Domestic Spying program, it would have been legal.
Programs such as Bush’s are exactly the reason that FISA was created: to protect Americans from the kinds of governement abuses carried out by the Kennedy, Johnson and Nixon Administrations during the 60’s and early 70’s. It was passed in 1978 after it came out that the government was spying heavily on whoever they wanted — on everyone from Jane Fonda to Martin Luther King.
The point was that “No,” actually, being at War isn’t an excuse to throw the Constitution out the window, in case you were wondering. That part the Founding Fathers wrote about “The right of the people to be secure against unreasonable searches and seizures…” — They meant that. And they meant it *especially* during times of war. Because then, like now, there was always some war going on with someone, somewhere. These rights have to be protected…but…hey, here’s this other court — one set up explicitly for granting these kinds of spying warrants, and quickly. So really, the government can still spy on you if it wants, but not as much as it wants to, willy nilly, and not without having to answer to anyone, ever. (So if you’re doing something that *looks* reasonably suspicious, look out!)
And spy they did. Only 5 of the more than 19,000 spy warrants presented to FISA were ever refused. But Bush wanted to spy on even more people. And on people that maybe didn’t have any connections to foreigners on the outside – what FISA was initially set up for.
Bush’s supporters are also saying that Congress explicitly gave Bush permission to commit these acts under the Joint Resolution passed almost unanimously by Congress in the days immediately following 911, referring to the passage that authorizes the President “To use all necessary and appropriate force against those…planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist attacks…” But we already know that the types of people being spied on in what came to be known as “The Program” went far beyond those directly connected to Al Quaeda or 911.
Here’s NOW’s take on this story. They let both sides tell there story.
But I think you will agree, after seeing the details for yourself, that it’s pretty matter of fact.
I’ve split it up into 4 pieces. I’m learning to list them all individually now so video RSS readers, such as FireAnt will download the media.
Now The Watchers – Domestic Spying 1 of 4 (11 MB)
Now The Watchers – Domestic Spying 2 of 4 (11 MB)
Now The Watchers – Domestic Spying 3 of 4 (7.3 MB)
Now The Watchers – Domestic Spying 4 of 4 (8.6 MB)
MP3s
Now The Watchers – Domestic Spying 1 of 4 (MP3 6.8 MB)
Now The Watchers – Domestic Spying 2 of 4 (MP3 7.1 MB)
Now The Watchers – Domestic Spying 3 of 4 (MP3 5.2 MB)
Now The Watchers – Domestic Spying 4 of 4 (MP3 6.2 MB)