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Rights and Liberties

Congress, Step Up and Start Defending the Constitution

By Art Brodsky, Huffington Post. Posted June 25, 2008.


The Democrats' capitulation on FISA is a triumph of Congressional self-importance over the guardianship of our Constitutional rights.
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Imagine yourself as the parent of a willful, destructive child who lives to break things. Every rattle -- split. Every cup -- cracked. Every toy -- destroyed. Every stuffed animal -- ripped to shreds. All of this behavior is punctuated by continued whining and crying when objects presented to him somehow don't work any more.

Why then, on God's green earth, would any parent give the child a priceless vase, knowing it will be reduced to shards in a few moment's time, even if those few moments are a respite between tantrums?

I wouldn't. You wouldn't. But the Congress of the United States will. The passage by the House last week, and the expected passage by the Senate this week, of the latest assault on our Constitution is nothing more than trying to take the easy way out by rewarding bad behavior. It's a triumph of Congressional self-importance over the guardianship of our rights.

The Democratic "leadership" wanted a bill President Bush would sign. That was the bottom line. It wouldn't matter if the Constitution got trashed. It wouldn't matter if the government was given too much authority. These "legislators" had to legislate, or else they would be made to look bad by a president whose policies are now opposed by about 80 percent of the American people. Heaven forbid there's no new legislation and the government has to operate with the authority already in place. How would that look? To some people, just fine. On the other hand, while the House "leadership" basks in its legislative glories, the Republicans go preening to the press on how they snookered the other side. They are only partially right. It's not fooling someone if that person knows what's going on is stupid yet participates willingly. That's what happened here.

Of course it's not only the "leadership" who were behind this travesty. The whining, self-important "Blue Dogs," Democrats from "conservative" districts also pushed for it so they can flaunt their credentials as tough on terrorists and strong on defense. Come on, little Blue Puppies. It's time to "man up" and to "woman up" on this. Try defending the Constitution for a change. Quit whimpering and hiding and defend freedom and the document to which you swore an oath to protect and to defend.

It was evident to anyone looking at the bill that the legislation took the idea of a warrant out of the hands of the most indulgent court in the land -- the secret Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) court that grants every request for a wiretap. It's simply a matter that the authorities can't be bothered with the niceties any more. Never mind that existing law allows for wiretapping now, with a warrant soon after.

No, the Executive Branch got something more. Rather than have a court review whether a wiretap is necessary, this new bill only allows a court to decide whether it had been correctly requested. The wiretap is presumed to be legal by the people ordering the wiretap. There's a bit of circular logic there. The emergency wiretapping can only take place under "exigent circumstances," which, in theory, are to happen only rarely. As Rep. James Langevin (D-RI) put it during the House debate: "This legislation will only work if everyone involved follows the rules and remains within the confines of the law."

Langevin raises the relevant point here. Who, exactly, are we rewarding with this new authority, and what have they done to deserve it? Let's go down the ever-increasing and depressing list. It's not like anyone can forget what was going on at DoJ. We are reminded every day by some new disclosure that the Department became more politicized than at any time in its history. We can start with hiring lawyers based on ideology. We can continue with firing U.S. Attorneys because they decline to file bogus voter-fraud cases against Democratic candidates. How about dropping or settling big law suits against special interests? And then, the big kahuna, spying on American citizens without warrants or authorization, knowing that it was likely illegal but doing it anyway. This was the program that even John Ashcroft refused to approve from his hospital bed. That's the shorthand. Eric Lichtblau's excellent book, Bush's Law: The Remaking of American Justice, lays it all out. News stories every day now tell the stories of the Kyles, Monicas, Bradleys and the rest of the kiddies remaking the Justice Department in their own image. There might be grown-ups in charge now, but the doctrine remains the same.


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See more stories tagged with: constitution, nancy pelosi, democrats, fisa, telecoms, telecom immunity, blue dog democrats, department of justice, john ashcroft, eric lichtblau

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View:
Congress Defend the Constitution? Pardon Me While I Laugh!
Posted by: Blueprelude on Jun 25, 2008 4:21 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Congress is not about the Constitution anymore. That idea went out with the twentieth century. Today Congress is about money and power. Give congresspersons enough money, and they will remove the particular right in the Bill or Rights or constitutional protect of your choice. For example, our loss of the Fourth Amendement is tied to telecom money given to congresspersons supporting the anti-libery FISA bill.

Money rules! Democracy is dead!

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Correction
Posted by: Blueprelude on Jun 25, 2008 4:25 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I meant "constitutional protection of your choice." Sorry for the sloppiness!

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Pelosi ,you're a disgrace to the House
Posted by: Doubtom on Jun 25, 2008 7:37 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Go home Pelosi, and spend your time with your first love and concern, making money. You damn sure don't represent the people!

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Compromise?
Posted by: raywigton on Jun 25, 2008 8:04 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If this is a compromise what did we get? FISA is trashed along with the constitution. All law suits against the telecoms are dismissed. The telecoms have immunity. Nobody will ever have to answer for anything they have done. Congress has sanctioned illegal spying by this administration which is probably used for political purposes too. Oh, Oh, I remember what it was that we the people got -- the telecoms "image" was tarnished. I sure feel better sending my payment to the eavesdropping bastards now that I know their image is tarnished.

I like the way "leadership" is stressed with quotations. I had always thought that Pelosi would be a good leader. Once she got the job, I immediately changed my mind. One might be tempted to ask - what has she done right?

Art Brodsky has confusing writing skills. Who is he addressing, the readers or the members of congress? "...of whom you and our "leadership" are deathly afraid. Stop acting like little kids afraid of the big bullies." This must have meant congress, but the rest of the article is written to us readers.

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Capitulating?
Posted by: Dianka on Jun 25, 2008 8:36 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Is it capitulation or cooperation? Gees, haven't you watched for enough years to see that the Dem Party leaders have consistently ensured the passage of the Republican agenda? At best, they only put up a pretense of opposition, and sure enough, they will fall "just short" of blocking or overriding whatever the Republicans want. Wake up already! There is now a single ruling party. Each election is now merely a competition between individuals vying for certain high-paying jobs. For this round, we are pretending that Barack Obama is a liberal/progressive. Progressive how? He is anti-New Deal, pro-corporate, and it isn't clear what he plans to do about the war. At any rate, you'll be very disappointed if you expect many changes in a single-party government.

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hung in effigy
Posted by: cwilsondrum on Jun 25, 2008 9:16 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
the democrats that voted for this drivel should be hung in effigy by their constituents and reminded that not long ago this was a precursor to the real thing. they all should be fired ASAP

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You have to wonder
Posted by: Jeanne on Jun 25, 2008 9:52 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
what Congress is up to (or down to, as the case may be). It appears we have one party -- Republicans, and Republicans-in-drag. Except for Chris Dodd, Russ Feingold, Robert Wexler, Dennis Kucinich, Maxine Waters, and a handful of others -- approximately 1 percent of our Congress -- the rest simply are too weak, self-interested, deluded, or corrupted to stand up and do the job they were elected to do and that they took an oath to do: uphold the Constitution and the laws of the land. We are a democracy-in-pretense. Our government is broken. The Republicans failed to protect us leading up to 9/11/01; and if they need to, they'll fail us again. And the idiocracy who vote in this country will vote to return them to office so that they can continue to protect us as they have protected us til now. (That is dripping with sarcasm, in case you can't tell.)

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"Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap..!"
Posted by: TJ-stars4peace on Jun 26, 2008 9:43 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
94 Democrats Demo-rats in truth who voted for this pig were paid off by the Telecommunications companies...

Bought and sold..

Hoyer was one of the biggest pigs of all..just a cheap crook..!

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Dood,Feingold promise filibuster
Posted by: whealeydj on Jun 26, 2008 6:15 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
contact your Democratic Senator and ask him or her to stand with Feingold and accountability on this one.

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