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Bush's I-Spy Lie

By Glenn Greenwald, AlterNet. Posted February 6, 2006.


What's at stake in this week's congressional hearings on spying is nothing less than whether Congress has any meaningful role to play in our system of government.

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For a list of five suggested questions for Alberto Gonzales, go HERE.

One of the most significant yet ignored aspects of the growing NSA scandal is the way in which the Bush administration deliberately and repeatedly deceived Congress, from 2001 until the administration's eavesdropping program was disclosed in December. Over the course of those four years, the Bush administration led the Congress, on numerous occasions, to falsely believe that it was eavesdropping only with the judicial oversight and approval required by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 (FISA).

As part of this deceit, the administration even encouraged Congress to engage in the humiliating spectacle of actively debating whether FISA should be amended to expand the administration's eavesdropping powers, when all the while the administration had secretly decided it had no obligation to comply with that law and could therefore exercise all of the eavesdropping powers it wanted.

Chief among the critical values at stake in this week's congressional hearings to investigate these actions, is whether Congress, the representative body of the people and the branch designated by the Constitution to make the laws, still has any meaningful role to play in our system of government.

In June 2002 -- months after the president ordered eavesdropping to be conducted without FISA warrants -- senators from both parties introduced legislation to liberalize FISA and expand the administration's eavesdropping powers. Sens. Michael DeWine, R-Ohio, Charles Schumer, D-N.Y. and John Kyl, R-Ariz., introduced FISA amendments and, in hearings before the Senate Intelligence Committee, they repeatedly expressed the belief that amendments to FISA were necessary for fighting terrorism.

The fact that the Senate Intelligence Committee held the 2002 hearings on possible FISA amendments proves that the committee members were unaware that the administration was not complying with that law. Senators would not have engaged in the pointless act of introducing amendments to expand surveillance powers if they had known President Bush had already decided he was above the rule of law.

As the Senate Intelligence Committee debated whether to amend FISA, the administration never once advised the committee that such amendments were a waste of time. Instead, President Bush allowed the Senate to go through the absurd spectacle of debating changes to a law which his administration had already secretly circumvented.

Worse still, the administration actively and repeatedly misled the Intelligence Committee, sending representatives of the Justice Department, FBI and CIA to the 2002 hearings in order to support the proposed, bipartisan amendments to FISA and to make statements which clearly (and falsely) conveyed to the senators that the administration was still obtaining warrants before eavesdropping.

But as we now know, all of these congressional proceedings regarding FISA were a complete sham. Months earlier, the administration had decided it could engage in warrantless eavesdropping, despite FISA making it a criminal offense to do so. The Bush Justice Department concluded that the president's eavesdropping powers -- even as they pertained to American citizens inside the United States -- could not be limited, even by congressional laws.

A worse institutional humiliation is difficult to imagine. The administration not only permitted but actively encouraged these senators to introduce legislation amending FISA, hold hearings, call witnesses and make grand statements about how enacting these amendments was of the utmost importance. The fact is that nothing was less important than what Congress did with FISA because the administration had secretly bestowed upon itself unlimited power.

The theories embraced by the Bush administration are both radical and unprecedented. These theories hold that, with regard to responses to the threat of terrorism both abroad and within the United States, decisions are "for the president alone to make," and neither the Congress nor the courts can limit the president in any way.

Thus, the question faced by the Congress is whether it will continue to stand by and allow the administration to claim unchecked power and relegate the Congress to an impotent, useless appendage.

The first chance the Congress has to answer that question will be on Feb. 6 when it questions Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, and it is not hyperbole to say that what is at stake are the founding and most fundamental principles for how our government operates.

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Glenn Greenwald is a New York-based constitutional litigator and author of the political blog, Unclaimed Territory.

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Not enough
Posted by: Lincoln fan on Feb 6, 2006 7:07 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is not enough for the poor and working class voters to vote out the Republicans in Congress and vote Democrats in.

We cannot be passive. What is required is for the majority to take control of both parties. We must tell both parties what we want. We must force them to declare, publicly, before the election, what they are going to do. Are they going to support the specific issues demanded by the majority or support the issues demanded by the rich and powerful minority?

The bottom line is which is more powerful the peoples' votes or the establishment's money? It is time for a showdown. Click on let's roll

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Who's government?
Posted by: douglashoyt on Feb 6, 2006 7:12 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Thus, the question faced by the Congress is whether it will continue to stand by and allow the administration to claim unchecked power and relegate the Congress to an impotent, useless appendage."

There is also a more important question:

Will the American citizen allow the Congress to be controlled by hirerlings of the corporate dominated government?

I believe that the US Constitution is a document designed to give and maintain government control by the wealthy, for the wealthy and of the wealthy.

Until the Constitution is significantly changed to reflect the diversity of social and cultural mix, we the people will rule only in theory.

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» RE: Who's government? Posted by: brasilaron
» RE: Who's government? Posted by: jbetterl
» RE: Who's government? Posted by: dlf
» RE: Who's government? Posted by: Lincoln fan
Rehnquist Foretold Of This Day
Posted by: dlf on Feb 6, 2006 8:15 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm currently reading 'The Brethren' by Bob Woodward, and the thing I am most struck by is how history repeats itself within such a short span of time. Nixon had attempted to do the same thing against "domestic radicals", but was thwarted by the Supreme Court with an opinion written by one of his own appointees Justice Powell.

What some might find surprising is that Rehnquist was a jurist who had no problem publishing opinions that were patently false, as they twisted the truth. Woodward reports on page 202 that Justices Douglas and Marshall had objected to a "misrepresentation" (quotation marks added for emphasis) by Rehnquist in (Jefferson v. Hackney). In that case his majority opinion lied about the legislative history of federal welfare. Rehnquist had warned the court liberals that "liberal" activism was forty years young, and once the balance moved back to the right his idea of Federalism would set precedent. He didn't say it in those words but, he may as well have, since that is precisely what has happened. Rehnquist felt that liberals were far too broad in their interpretation of the Constitution. And his firmly held belief in State's Rights as a means of defining individual rights harkens back to the Civil War era.

Today some 25 years after the publication of this book one sees the seeds that Nixon, Burger, and Rehnquist planted. So foul was the stench of Rehnquist's refusal to correct his Jefferson v. Hackney opinion that one of his own clerks sent notes of apology for his part in the case to other Justices' clerks. Woodward points out, "That the liberals saw a willingness on the part of Rehnquist to cut corners to reach a conservative result." He doesn't spare Chief Justice Burger either and portrays him as a Chief who waited to see where the majority opinion lay. He would then attach himself to that opinion. He also apparently had problems with math causing him to miscount the minority, enabling him to assign opinion to whomever he chose.

While the liberals in this book come off as a productive and knowledgable diva (Douglas), lazy with brilliant flourishes (Marshall), fair-minded (Brennan), and a jurist without peer (Chief Warren) none appears malevolent or cunning. Unfortunately the same can not be said of many of the key conservatives. I encourage anyone who argues issues to read this book and learn how their opinions have been shaped by The Brethren.

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NSA's "other authorizations"
Posted by: ScottP on Feb 6, 2006 8:27 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Listen closely to Gonzales's testimony. A couple of times he dances around questions, noting "other authorizations" for NSA. What that means in English is that the current discussion is only about the part of the programs that they choose to talk about. So they won't talk about the broad net sweeps, where computers filter all conversations for key words and save ones where the key words appear, which have been in place at least since Reagan. And notice the Senators let that pass right by. Why? Because Congress holds the purse strings. If they truly want the spying to end, they'd cut the funding for it. The peeping Tom's aren't doing this as volunteers, they're employees, and when the funding stops the spying stops. There's no need for hearings except as political posturing. The solution is easy and everyone in the hearing knows it: reduce their funding and NSA will stop spying on peace activists and other political enemies. Each year the NSA continues to spy on people without probable cause of criminal activity, put in another cut, it won't take that long for them to shape up.

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The Face of the GOP
Posted by: kevnbro on Feb 6, 2006 9:20 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I find it insanely amazing that the GOP will say and do anything in defense of George W. in the attempts to salvage some face for this years elections and the presidential bid of 2008.
In a nutshell, regarding his unlawful spying they are saying, "it's perfectly legal for the president to break the law".
Just how stupid do they think the American people are? Or are they convinced that their constituency IS that stupid?
Amazing. Amazing. Amazing.
If our government is convinced that we as the American people are that easily manipulated and mislead, this country is on a one-way road to self destruction.

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» RE: The Face of the GOP Posted by: johnecolby
The Story In A Nutshell Glen...
Posted by: starvinmarvy on Feb 6, 2006 1:59 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When you started the story with:
What's at stake in this week's congressional hearings on spying is nothing less than whether Congress has any meaningful role to play in our system of government.....
it will indicate the "speed" in which our government is "imploading"...or disintergating before our very eyes!

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Has Congress any Meaningful Role?
Posted by: kww355 on Feb 7, 2006 3:56 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How can anyone that's even slightly above comatose ask such a ridiculous question ?! Congress has been a meaningful rubberstamp for the last 6 years.

And now that the Cowboy-In-Chief has packed the Supreme Court with right wing fanatics, we can all bid a fond farewell to checks and balances.

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Bush's "War" and our lives
Posted by: kgs1947 on Feb 7, 2006 5:13 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Bush has some wierd view that we are at "war"! Well, that just is another one of his manipulative methods of distracting people from the real battles. While he funnels citizens monies into an undeclared war, he undercuts our future (education, health care, relations with other nations). Isn't it necessary to declare war upon another nation in order to say we are at "war"? And, doesn't Congress have to approve such a declaration? Now, he is wire tapping who knows who!

Impeach the man!

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OUR WIMPY DEMOCRATIC SENATE
Posted by: krose on Feb 7, 2006 7:05 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
ARE AS MUCH TO BLAME AS THE rePUKES! They were too quiet, for fear that their "NOISE" would enflame voters. They became the "ABUSED WIVES" To the rePUKE's "ABUSERS!" So they "took it," and they continue to "take it,!" They are a completely ineffective bunch of WIMPS, and with the exception of very few, such as RUSS FEINGOLD, they either have no principles, or they are just blathering idiots! NOW WE HAVE DESCENDED DEEP INTO FASCISM, AND I ASK HOW DO WE GET OUT?

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congress has a meaningful role?
Posted by: lubbock lady on Feb 7, 2006 7:23 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In the past few years, I have the impression that Congress' role is to pass bills that Bush/Cheney/Rove want. They even pass them in the middle of the night, without reading them at times. Hmmm..

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In Questioning Gonzales
Posted by: the islander on Feb 7, 2006 8:21 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In questioning Gonzales it seems to me that the senators should bear in mind that this is a man who believes that people have to be brutally tortured in order to make them tell the truth.

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It's time to
Posted by: NamVeT on Feb 7, 2006 9:46 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
construct a gallows in front of the White House. Then frog march ALL OF THESE CRIMINALS out and hang 'em high. Do you think you would get a trial if "detained" by our dictator? Hell no. These folks are the absolute lowest scum on the planet. We are closer now to being prisoners in our own homes than we ever have in the past. And if THEY have it their way, that'll be exactly how we live our lives from this point on! Providing of course that the "SUPREME IDIOT AND MORONIC DEAR ONE has'nt blown up the fucking world yet.

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gentlewoman
Posted by: lokicat on Feb 7, 2006 2:19 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Humiliation"-pay attention to that word when you see it and you'll see it often. Reagan's first act of humilation after being (crowned) installed was to take on and publicly destroy/humiliate the Air Traffic Controllers. Every Republican/extremist/zealot (pardon me while I conflate those words) since has specialized in humiliating and shaming opponents.

Before that it was boozy Nixon with his latenight phonecalls drunk. That man had no shame at the end though reportedly he'd started out a Quaker.

Now it's Bush and he has fastened on Congress to blame. 'It's them. It's their fault!' So they must be humiliated and shamed until the rightwing press starts a hue and cry about them being "toothless" "wimps," (etc. You know the litany as well as I do). The war on Congress has begun, so now the Republicans seek to ally themselves with the Democrats.

Bush acts shamelessly all the time. He is constitutionally (couldn't resist!) unable to take responsibility for his actions. The man is an untreated alcoholic. He has no shame. All he knows is to blame and shame and project his political inadequacies onto others.

Whoever gets to hang onto his honor--wins. We live in an addictive society and it's time we started recognizing that it's not just individuals and families that have addictive behavior patterns--it's the whole country and its Denial.
gentlewoman

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» RE: gentlewoman Posted by: krose
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