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Is the U.S. Becoming a Police State?

By Sean Gonsalves, AlterNet. Posted December 21, 2005.


Martin Luther King, the most celebrated dove in American history, was spied on because he was considered a threat. That means none of us is safe.
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''Special collection program'' is the euphemism that the National Security Agency uses for spying on American citizens without a warrant.

Because of the New York Times investigative report published last week, President Bush was forced to admit that he had ''reauthorized this program more than 30 times since the Sept. 11 attacks'' -- something he intends ''to do as our nation faces a continuing threat from al-Qaida.''

And this is why language is so important. People were calling Martin Luther King -- whose federalized birthday the nation will recognize next month -- a ''communist traitor'' in a Cold War political context. The most celebrated dove in American history was spied on because he was considered a threat by his own government. That means none of us is safe.

It also means anything can be justified under the banner of ''security,'' which is why those willing to give up their liberty in exchange for security deserve neither. Remember when President Bush joked that things would be easier if he were a dictator. I guess he wasn't joking.

Democrats and Republicans are now calling for a congressional investigation to determine if the president went beyond the Constitution.

Over the weekend, the president said he authorized the program to ''intercept the international communications of people with known links to al-Qaida,'' which doesn't inspire much confidence given this administration's now debunked claims of al-Qaida links to Saddam.

If you think it disrespectful to discuss dictators, President Bush and the Constitution in the same column, be sure to give John Dean a call. The former White House counsel under President Nixon wrote a paper in 2002 in which he discussed the possibility of a America becoming a ''constitutional dictatorship."

''The distinction between a 'constitutional dictator' and a strong president is remarkably thin, if nonexistent,'' he wrote. All this eavesdropping business reminded me of C. William Michael's 2002 book 'No Greater Threat: America After September 11 and the Rise of the National Security State.'

Besides providing a detailed analysis of the USA Patriot Act, he lays out the 12 most common characteristics of a national security state:

  • Visible increase in uniformed security. Got that?
  • Lack of accountability in law enforcement. George Tenet got a medal for his fine WMD work and ''Brownie'' was praised for doing a heckuva job in the Katrina aftermath;
  • Reduced judiciary and executive treatment of suspects. Can you say ''detainee?"
  • Secrecy of ruling authority and momentum of threat. It's an open secret that this administration has taken official secrecy to a whole new level;
  • Media in the service of the state. The Times held the eavesdropping story for a year, to say nothing of the WMD reporting of the major media in the run-up to the war
  • National resources devoted to security threat. The most recent budget passed in Congress speaks for itself;
  • Patriotism moving to nationalism. Since 9-11, America was divided in two -- between those who don't know the difference between patriotism and nationalism and those who are terrorist-sympathizing, blame-America-first traitors
  • Lack of critical response by religions. Name one prominent national church leader critical of the way U.S. power has been wielded. At this point, I'll settle for a religious leader who isn't telling their parishioners to vote Republican to stop abortion and gay rights or who isn't calling for the assassination of foreign leaders;
  • Wartime mentality and permanent war economy. See any Bush speech;
  • Targeted individuals and groups. Scott Ritter, Richard Clarke, Joseph Wilson, Cindy Sheehan and MoveOn.org come to mind;
  • Direct attack on dissent. See previous comment;
  • and
  • Increased surveillance of citizenry. Or as it's being called now, a ''special collection program.''

Digg!

Sean Gonsalves is a Cape Cod Times staff reporter and a syndicated columnist.

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NAZI AMERIKA!!! or HEIL BUSHITLER!!!
Posted by: Bushhater on Dec 21, 2005 5:03 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This administration has shown nothing but utter contempt for Congress, the judicial branch of government, the Constitution, due process, and the Bill of Rights. Warrantless wiretaps by executive order, "sneak and peak" under the"Patriot Act", enforcement of "free speech zones", squashing dissent, arresting American citizens on American soil and sending them in to a lawless gulag without charges are by definition, a tyrannical fascist police state. Next we will have summary executions of anyone who criticizes Bush. Bush is quoting Hitler when he states that he needs extraordinary powers iin order to protect the country(Hitler said the same thing in 1933 when the Reichstag went up in flames).

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kt1066
Posted by: kt1066 on Dec 21, 2005 5:10 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What did you ever think the Patriot Act was for? I thought it was always for protecting the GOP from dissenters, never protecting the U.S. from terrorists. It was obvious from the beginning that the P.A. was the first step toward a police state.

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I used to think Bush/Hitler comparisons were silly, but...
Posted by: nickptar on Dec 21, 2005 8:19 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
now I think there may be something to it. This + the massive insistence on being able to torture prisoners + the whole climate of fear Bush has been creating = ???

I don't think Bush wants to be a dictator, though. He knows how hard it would be to convince the people that would be a good thing. He just wants eternal Republican Evangelical domination of the US, regardless of what figurehead is in charge.

And I do think the Republicans, in their cynicism and egotism, underestimate the difficulty of taking over. The American people may be credulous, but they aren't completely blind.

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SuperEdo
Posted by: SuperEdo on Dec 21, 2005 8:29 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Lack of critical response by religions. Name one prominent national church leader critical of the way U.S. power has been wielded. At this point, I'll settle for a religious leader who isn't telling their parishioners to vote Republican to stop abortion and gay rights or who isn't calling for the assassination of foreign leaders."

Didn't the Catholic Church make some highly critical comments lately implied to be directed to the United States, specifically in regard to the dangers of fundamentalism?

I find it odd that the Catholic Church strives to be progressive - considering its age - while many religious people in this country attempt to remain in the flat earth era.

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» RE: SuperEdo Posted by: Belter
» RE: SuperEdo Posted by: timg98376
The Patriot Act, terrorism, 9/11 lies
Posted by: tcx2 on Dec 21, 2005 12:05 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Since 9/11 the White House has claimed that the world has changed. That, only now should we be focused on terrorism in the form of a global war masking an imperialistc agenda.

The Patriot Act is 342 pages long. It was sent to Congress in 8 days after 9/11 and signed into law roughly a month after 9/11.

What should be clear is:

1) It was mostly written prior to 9/11
2) It packages many loosely related things into one act
3) The president was sitting on it for some time

Contradictions:

a) If the world changed after 9/11, then why were they worried about this "crucial" and sweeping anti-terrorism law before 9/11?

b) If the White House was really worried about terrorism, why did they sit on legislation that could aid them?

There was terrorism before 9/11 and there was terrorism after. What exactly changed?

Answer: Nothing.

And the coup d'etat marches on.

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» Poignant analysis! Posted by: Mein Bush
Sigh, no sh*t
Posted by: saretto on Dec 21, 2005 12:39 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Kids, There's a concept I want you ALL to warm up to. The government will make these changes slowly. You will NOT be able to stop it because we, including myself, will NOT get UP off OUR ASSES to STOP IT.
SO, we will be raising our children in a paranoid, freedom-free place. What are we going to do about it??

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» RE: doing something Posted by: Unbowed
» RE: Sigh, no sh*t Posted by: robchapman
» RE: Sigh, no sh*t Posted by: Unbowed
doing something right now!
Posted by: Unbowed on Dec 21, 2005 1:36 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Lets uncover the truth about all of the things that Bush has done. This latest breach of law is a great place to start or a great place to continue. I think people are really interested in knowing about how Bush and his team decided it was OK to spy on Americans. Let take a look at what the justifications were. I really want to know. Don't you?

If you would like help uncover the facts and have not already signed, we can help uncover the truth that the Administration would like to keep hidden for as long as he is in office. Lets not let that happen. Please sign the Petition. Its one more thing we can do to help rid ourselves of the bumbler and his bunch. According to reports, political appointees in the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel wrote still-classified legal opinions laying out the supposed justification for this program.

Governor Howard Dean is filing a formal demand that they release these documents.


http://www.democrats.org/page/petition/domesticspying

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» RE: doing something right now! Posted by: robchapman
» RE: doing something right now! Posted by: billfaster
Ask a 'Radical"
Posted by: jeffrey7 on Dec 21, 2005 3:08 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I saw the 'Police State' in action when I was a small boy.
The Dayton Police were evicting 'protesters' from a lunchcounter for 'whites'. They were using electro-shock cattle prods. I later saw them using firehoses on full output nailing people sending them 20-30 feet away from where they were.
As anti-war protesters we saw our Right of Assembly turned over. No more than 4 could gather anywhere without a permit. That's Illegal by the way,but the Court of the Day said it was cool.
It used to be that the cops could only kick down you door without a warrant if there were known guns on site. Now they don't even need a warrant to come in. They just have to 'say' they do.
When Bush 41 came around I went to see him. Other folks had a 'permit to protest' at a jobsite he was visiting.
I got up to the Pres and unferlled an upsidedown flag with
brown paint writing,that looked like excrement, that said 'STOP THE NEW WORLD ORDER'. Then Bush got hit with a broccoli.
NOTHING HAPPENED. Strange when you consider that I was yelling things like'Fuck-you", 'You're a Nazi', "Eat Shit', at every break in his speech. While over at the 'Legal Protest' folks in
battle gear, black outfits,M16's,clubs,riot gloves,boots the whole shabang,were busy routing protesters,while Georgie rolled up. Thing is these were workers that were loosing money back of his jobs policy.They had a reason to be there, I just thought he was an genocidal asshole,and he was.
Junior is no better. He's so slick about it that no-one sees it
because HE ignores them,make the media do likewise and only those who were there know how many got the club.
Are we in a Police State? YES!!! We have to stop them from making the Police World.

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This is the endgame for vertical organizations
Posted by: b7j0c on Dec 21, 2005 10:31 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This behavior is not new in the US, it is not new in Europe, it is not new in Asia. All of the major democratic powers have engaged in the surveillance of citizens for some time, and it is a gross abuse of power. Make it illegal, it will continue. Kick over some stones, it will still continue. The NSA has been intercepting the messages of citizens for decades, and it will not stop even if told to stop. Disband the NSA and another agency will take up the task. Likewise in Europe, which has cooperating with Echelon, TIA and other NSA programs. They are telling you they only spy on bad people but thats like Google or Yahoo telling you they only crawl the links you are searching for. No, all the data is collected, how else could you determine what is actionable or not? Lets talk about visual surveillance too. This is the next generation. Many large cities already have thousands of cameras in use, by police and business. Pattern matching in images will extend this to predictive uses.

These vertical organizations - corporations, governments, militaries, employ these measures to erase change. Its working. Even this discussion...what is it? Pointless permitted dissent. This will continue and get much worse until these institutions finally give way to dynamic, horizontal organizations (ad hoc groups, transparencies, etc). Of course the bottom line is that most people really do want the promise of security...they must be shown that this type of surveillance does almost nothing to enhance their personal safety.

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» RE: b7j0c Posted by: Unbowed
Religious response
Posted by: Metanoia on Dec 22, 2005 7:11 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There are those of us in the greater church that are doing something to stand against the establishment of a state religion. There ARE church's being investigated (Episcopal) and clergy being arrested (Jim Wallis et al) but it gets little play in the state press ... at least there are those who have a chance to condemn the insanity of Pat Robertson (Rush with a Bible) This shtuff has nothing to do with Jesus at least not the Jesus that I know.
There will be (and needs to be) more action by people of faith ... any faith ... before the pendulum will swing.

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» RE: eligious response Posted by: robchapman
Well, AlterNet?
Posted by: woodbee on Dec 22, 2005 8:11 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why not "give John Dean a call"?

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I'm currently living in a police state +
Posted by: Gonnuts on Dec 22, 2005 8:16 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I live in New Orleans. If anyone wants to see an experiment in what g. w. bush's future of America will be come down here.
After Katrina hit and bush finally woke-up to the fact that he screwed-up by not bringing in the National Guard to help maintain order bush went 180% in the other direction. For a month not only were professional para-military assassination groups like Black Water roaming the city and killing at will the city is still occupied with military units closing in on 4 months after the storm hit. Troops and military police are all over this city of some 75,000 returned residents. The local police force which policed a city of over 400,000 has over 80% of it's force back. So what are these military units still doing here?
My guess is is to see how far this administration can take the occupation of an American city. There is NO reason for the continued occupation and presents of New Orleans by the military. The citizens that have returned aren't looting, they're re-building the city. Something bush has also broken his promise on. But that's another story.
What was once one of the more liberal cities in the world to live is now under military occupation, and it's coming soon to a city near you once the protests start against this autocratic, criminally corporate corrupt, plutocracy.
Merry Christmas indeed.

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Thanks Sean
Posted by: Kanefire on Dec 22, 2005 9:34 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You just keep nailing it!

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The evolution of the police state
Posted by: operdoc on Dec 22, 2005 1:14 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Becoming a police state? It's more a question of how much liberty to we have left. Since the days of J. Edgar Hoover our rights as citizens have been under attack. Nixon carried it one further. Now we have so many spy agencies, they trip over each other. The Patriot Act is the final straw before the final straw. If Bush manages to stack the Supreme Court and the lower courts, who will be there to defend individual rights?
We are at a crucial point, and it is imperative that we fight back loud and long, or we will truly being forever holding our peace.

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We ARE already a police state
Posted by: hotlipsin61 on Dec 22, 2005 4:26 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Good comments by those in this post. I think we're already there.
Go back to the sixties when children were squirted with firehoses in Birmingham; National Guard troops in American inner cities; King's assassination; the college students at Kent State who were killed by National Guardsmen rifles. It goes on and on.
We were fooled by all that mumbo-jumbo rhetoric spewed from Congress after 9/11, when, "leaders" called for an overhaul of our spy agencies, whom this shitty country has an overlapping of them.
It didn't start with this current regime. It's been in the making for years because America and SOME Americans are fearful of things they cannot understand, like Islam.
That list in Gonsalves' column is already acknowledged by those in the know, and just go out anywhere in public and what do you see? Police substations in shopping centers, "rent-a-cops" at sporting events, patrolling gated communities (see Orange County), and entire neighborhoods, increased racial profiling; and the topper is the FBI and CIA using cameras at the Super Bowl to spot potential terrorists/criminals. C'mon, do you really believe a wanted criminal is going show his/her face in public like that? They'll be nabbed in a hurry.
Oh, well. This is (now) America. When they come for your neighbors and friends, be ready. But you'll have nowhere to go, except to jail. Why do you think states are building more prisons instead of schools?
Think about that as you sit in a holding cell as I have been.
My charge for those who are curious? Drving while Black in a White neighborhood. I was never charged with anything. Let's say it was a very long day.

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police state + more
Posted by: saywhat? on Dec 22, 2005 5:08 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
i guess i'd be more complacent if i knew i'd be on the 'monthly compensation list'...but this police state is just going to make us all work our asses off, unless we buyoff into the game of exploiting others.... pardon me...i'm sorry.... but just give me that higher power that will allow me the creative freedom to be wise...........

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If they were bugging Jesse Jackson today...
Posted by: Mein Bush on Dec 22, 2005 6:12 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
... Republican morons would argue "What part of AFRICAN American don't you understand? Jackson is obviously in the pocket of a foreign power, Africa!"

I'm not trying to be flippant here but given how they've explained away all their bungling and dishonesty in the past, this kind of argument would be included in their talking points faster than you can say secret-torture-prisons.

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An even worse police state is coming
Posted by: impeachbushyesterday on Dec 22, 2005 8:17 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The secret, unaccountable domestic spying and the other listed characteristics of a "national security state" are true enough, but in terms of the police state you ain't seen nothin' yet. Wait until REAL ID Act takes hold -- then we'll become a "your papers please" society, complete with mandatory residential registration of all citizens (and you'll have to prove your address just to get a driver's license). The government will be right there to put all of your most private data, including biometric data, on the license chip and on line forever. You won't be able to do squat without constantly showing your ID -- presenting it for scanning -- and you won't be able to do squat (such as travel) unless government agents, acting in secret, decide you haven't opposed the administration and therefore don't constitute a "threat." Oh, right, that's already the case.

Compared with the Bush administration's current massive effort to treat all Americans as suspect and to gather every possible shred of information about them, the earlier efforts of the Nazi SS, the East German Stasi, and the KGB to spy on their citizens and compile dossiers on them looks naive and almost benign.

Santayana's reminder is so true: Those who ignore the lessons of history are doomed to repeat them. The current administration and know-nothing wingnuts don't exactly ignore history; they don't even know about it.

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» RE: An even worse police state is coming Posted by: impeachbushyesterday
Hollywood scenario
Posted by: Poederbach on Dec 23, 2005 1:10 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
two things are clear to me from what I read in all the comments

1. A two party system is not working, you are all unhappy with The Dems as well as the GOP.

2. We let Bush go to far already, btw Bush is not one person but many, this explains his odd behaviour. Probably the only way to get rid of this group is a second civil war, facists and people afraid not being with them vs. the ones that are not with him (them) and are not afraid to be that way

The world will be lauging their pants off: "...and the US is telling us how to behave?!?!"

Wake up, it is not a dream it is a nightmare Hollywood style!

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Will they never learn
Posted by: gramps on Dec 24, 2005 10:21 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The CIA assassinated Mossedeg the legally elected president of Iran and put in the Shah. It only took an old Ayatollah Khomeini who was in exile in England to cause a revolution that got rid of the Shah and left the US with their diplomats prisoners. We finally got the diplomats back because of help from the Canadians. The crusaders tried bringing Christianity to the region but never succeeded. There were seven crusades, the first one was in 1099 but the Moslem religion is still dominant in the Middle East. It would seem that the poor Jews who escaped from the Holocaust would look for a better area to establish a refuge than Israel, but the Zionist belief in Jewish nationalism led them to create a Jewish enclave in the heart of a Mohammedan continent.

Leo Straus the ideological father of the neo-cons believed that lying was a legitimate tool for those who would invade the Moslem world and that we should engaged in “regime change”. The neo-cons used the 9/11 attack to begin their invasions. The first was Afghanistan, and the second Iraq. They are now rejoicing over elections taking place in Iraq that will inevitably return Iraq to the Moslems from a secular Bathist regime. The seventeen military bases that have planned for Iraq will not last very long if history is any judge; nor will the oil companies get control over Iraqi oil any more than they got control over the oil of Saudi Arabia.

We are now seeing “blowback” in action as the stink of corruption in the government is reaching the noses of the American people. The Abramoff defection in the Tom Delay case threatens both houses of Congress and the conviction of Duke Cunningham raises the specter of exposure. Majority leader Frist is charged with insider trading, and Senator Ted Stevens threatened to resign because his amendment to build a $223.000,000 bridge to nowhere was rejected. He didn’t resign and followed this idiocy by an amendment to the Defense bill to okay oil drilling in the Anwar section of Alaska which was also rejected.

One would think that the Democrat Leadership Council would be overjoyed at the tragedies afflicting the Republicans, but not so. They are going with Hillary for president and still think the war against Iraq was a good idea. Even the exposure of Bush’s spying on the American people doesn’t seem to affect their “Bush Lite” position.

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agitator church and state
Posted by: eileenflmng on Dec 26, 2005 10:44 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
THE GOOD NEWS

I AM A COMMITTED DOVE WITH A BIG MOUTH AND SINCE I GAVE 'BIRTH' TO WAWA:
http://www.wearewideawake.org

5 MONTHS AGO BIG BROTHER; USA MILITARY AND USA GOVT. HAVE VISITED WAWA OVER 1,200 TIMES.

IF I ONLY WROTE LETTERS TO THE EDITORS THEY WOULD NEVER READ THEM, BUT EXERCISING FREEDOM OF SPEECH AND DISSENT ON THE INTERNET WILL KEEP DEMOCRACIES HEALTHY

I AM REPORTING FROM THE LITTLE TOWN AND OCCUPIED TERRITORY OF BETHLEHEM NOW.

WAWA:
HTTP://WWW.WEAREWIDEAWAKE.ORG

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The Police State is Alive and Well
Posted by: Uriahz on Jan 4, 2006 12:40 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Perhaps it's unwise of me to be posting such information on the internet, but 'papers please' is already in force even in rural America.

In White River Jct., Vermont, there is a border patrol station on I91S, over 100 miles from any border. What's it doing there? Getting folks used to dealing with unconstitutional and immoral invasion of privacy, all in the name of security. Coming soon to a town near you!

Enjoy the boot of oppression, folks, it won't let up any time soon.

Think you can do something about it? Gonna be a soldier to fight fascism like your grandfather? Only this time you're fighting the army, not joining it. And you're gonna be called a terrorist, you're gonna be called a sociopath. You're gonna fight? Understand that the vast majority will celebrate your execution. Thinking about being a martyr? Count on being unsung, count on utterly failing to move people to uprise. The only successful martyr is the famous and beloved. Kent State? You should see the news reports, how they showed the man on the street giving opinions the day of the tragedy. How everyone thought those students got what they deserved.

Revolution is no easy business. Easier to ignore what needs to be done and go about your life, just hoping to pass by unnoticed. Go along with what you're told, get yourself that house, raise your family.

We are ruled by traitors to the American people. They are traitors to the Constitution, and enemies of democracy. They are truly evil and will stop at nothing to ensure total domination. Currently you can mostly ignore their corruption. How long before everyone knows people who've 'disappeared'?

The question is, what are you gonna do about it?

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I used to think Bush-Hitler comparisons were silly
Posted by: Ellie1 on Jan 11, 2006 12:37 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have always thought Bush was as dangerous, if not more dangerous, than Hitler. I am also amazed at the number of Americans who still regard him favorably(Bush, not Hitler-but on second thought). I also notice that those who hold Bush in high regard also tend to be anti-semitic, racially prejudiced, and just generally small minded and uninformed. Hence the "No Child Left Behind" Act-keep the masses uninformed and stupid. Todays Neoncons would have made excellent fodder for Adolph. Heil George.

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