Pete Zicato • Mar 21, 2011 2:07 pm
The U.S. government, with assistance from major telecommunications carriers including AT&T, has engaged in a massive program of illegal dragnet surveillance of domestic communications and communications records of millions of ordinary Americans since at least 2001.
Stormieweather;719521 wrote:That would be the Bush era.
Stormieweather;719521 wrote:Yeah. Blame Obama.
Guess you missed the part that said:
That would be the Bush era.
TheMercenary;719624 wrote:Completely expanded and reinforced since then with broad support of Congress, passed and reinforced into law under a Demoncratically dominated Congress, and most recently supported by Obama.
Rush Limbaugh is so proud of you!TheMercenary;719881 wrote:Let me guess, this A-hole said the words "mission accomplished".... what a tool.
tw;719879 wrote:You do tend to confuse legalized wiretapping as approved by Congress with ... They even had a secret court to approve wiretaps. But even that was too much restriction for extremists. The secret court might not approve some wire taps - even though they approved all but maybe three. So extremists demanded illegal monitoring. And called that good...
A major difference is going to court to first authorize a wiretap. And to stop wiretapping even British and Australian diplomats. And stopping extraordinary rendition (international kidnapping), eliminating secret overseas prisons, and routine use of torture (as any Nazi would so love).Fair&Balanced;720093 wrote:Excluding the illegal actions of the past, there is not a hell of a lot of difference between the two national security policies.