Bush: Black Is White

[quote]Professor X wrote:
kroby wrote:
Hasn’t it become obvious to everyone yet that “government” has only it’s own interests in mind; regardless of the best interests of its electorate? Pulling heartstrings to get elected, all the while trodding on whatever rights/privicies one may assume they have… under the guise of the threat du jour. McCarthy, it seems, has yet to leave the building.

You would think most would understand this. Instead, we seem to get conservatives covering for every step that this administration takes instead of even worrying about their loss of freedom or erosion of rights. I am amazed that any conservative would jump forward and cover for this action. That makes no sense. Do people even bother to think for themselves anymore or is it that claiming party affiliation makes you this blind?[/quote]

Prof X,

I think the same can be said of you and all of the rest of the “Bush bashers.” Do YOU think for yourself or does your party affliation or political bent direct your thinking. This does cut both ways.

Bottom line is if you want to assert that there is an absolute guarantee of a right to privacy in the U.S. Constitution then please give the reference where we may find it.

In case you cannot cite the specific language in the Consitituion where this may be found, we move on to the next level. That is, are you really serious about people having an absolute right to privacy on an oversees call with possible terrorists? You cannot be serious can you?

What next, a right of a private meeting to plot the overthrow of the U.S. government? Ludicrous!

Get your Constitutional facts straight and stop attacking others for their views on this issue. At least conservatives have a constitutional basis for their views. Do you?

[quote]dermo wrote:
mike08042 wrote:
I am not going to get into this topic of bush or the democrats, because its obviously a split 50/50 in terms of agreeing with the bush admin or disagreeing. The way I see it, is that if you have nothing to hide, why would you give a shit who listens in to your calls? ohhhh they invaded my privacy, yeah and so is little johnny with his FM radio. Is it right? No but what are you going to do about it? Live your damn life and go about your business, if you have something to hide, you might be afraid that the govt is going to wiretap you. Everyone is way to paranoid, and probably have been watching too many Michael Moore films.
Anyways, thats as far as I am going to go.If you have nothing to hide, who cares.

The problem is the potential for abuse. This is a slippery slope. What is to stop politicians from using this for partisan purposes? Does anything think that Karl Rove would shy away from such a tactic? Once it is ok for the executive branch to eavesdrop, what stops congress from eventually obtaining that power? It is the gradual erosion, played out over a siginificant amount of time, that deprives us of our rights.[/quote]

No “slippery slope” here. Just do as my mom always told me growing up:

Stay away from the bad guys!

[quote]GDollars37 wrote:
dermo wrote:

JeffR,

***Democracies are based on process, not demagoguery. We don’t disregard laws and the constitution because of emotional appeals. And if they wanted to intercept calls from al-queda, they could get a warrant. And if there was not time beforehand, they have a 72-hour window afterwards to obtain one.

If we are supposed to accept that the president can spy on anyone without being accountable, then we have to trust that our politicians, now and in the future, on both sides, will exercise the restraint to use this power for proper means and with restraint. Is there any reason to think that?

Well put.[/quote]

Please state the law that requires the President of the U.S. to get a warrant in these specific cases.

If you cannot come up with one (which you will not) then stop attcking this President for using his legitamate powers to protect us.

Remember while your pal Slick Willy was having his “slacks adjusted” in the Oval Office by a young bimbo, Osama was plotting his acts on the U.S. without any opposition. The attack finally came 8 months into the Bush administration, but if Clinton had done more work to stop the terrorists or at least address the issue, perhaps Osama would have not been so successful in attacking us.

Terrorists and those who collaborate with them HAVE NO RIGHTS – to privacy or otherwise!

Explain to me why he could not get a warrant, either before or after. FISA warrants are easy to obtain. If they are not getting one, it is either because they are lazy, or have something to hide.

Here are some conservatives who have issues with the program - are Sam Brownback, George Will, Lindsay Graham, and William Saphire part of the ABB crowd?

Sens. Chuck Hagel (R-NE) and Olympia Snowe (R-ME), both members of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, signed a December 19 letter calling for immediate hearings on Bush’s surveillance program. Along with three of the committee’s Democrats, Hagel and Snowe stated:
We write to express our profound concern about recent revelations that the United States Government may have engaged in domestic electronic surveillance without appropriate legal authority. These allegations, which the President, at least in part, confirmed this weekend require immediate inquiry and action by the Senate.

We respectfully request that the Select Committee on Intelligence and the Committee on the Judiciary, which share jurisdiction and oversight of this issue, jointly undertake an inquiry into the facts and law surrounding these allegations. The overlapping jurisdiction of these two Committees is particularly critical where civil liberties and the rule of law hang in the balance.

A December 22 article in the Lincoln (Nebraska) Journal Star quoted Hagel as saying, “No president is ever above the law. … We are a nation of laws. You cannot avoid or dismiss a law.” The Journal Star added: “At issue, Hagel said, is whether the decision to order such surveillance violates a 1978 law [FISA] requiring approval by a secret U.S. foreign intelligence surveillance court.”

Senate Judiciary Committee chairman Arlen Specter (R-PA) has agreed to hold hearings on Bush surveillance program. As a December 20 New York Times article noted, Specter said he was “skeptical” of Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales’ assertion that “this electronic surveillance is within the law, has been authorized” by Congress. The Times reported:
Mr. Specter, who has said he will hold hearings on the program soon after the confirmation hearings for the Supreme Court nominee, Judge Samuel A. Alito Jr., said he did not believe the president’s decision to inform a handful of members of Congress was sufficient.

‘‘I think it does not constitute a check and balance,’’ he said. ‘‘You can’t have the administration and a select number of members alter the law. It can’t be done.’’

Sen. Richard Lugar (R-IN), on the January 1 edition of CNN’s Late Edition with Wolf Blitzer, also called for congressional hearings on Bush’s surveillance program:
BLITZER: Speaking of intercepts, how comfortable are you with the president’s now publicly acknowledged decision right after 9-11 to authorize secret wiretap surveillance of American citizens, among others, involved in overseas phone calls or e-mails or faxes without getting a formal court order?

LUGAR: Well, I can understand in the context of 9-11 that there may have been, in a common sense way, a reason why calls coming from the Middle East or Afghanistan to America might be intercepted, but I think the Congress quite rightly is trying to take a look at now the fact that we’re past 9-11, we’re going to have to live with the war on terror for a long while. And whether it’s the treatment of prisoners that we’ve been discussing, for example, or elements of the Patriot Act, likewise intercepts are going to have to be given, I think, a pretty good hearing. And what –

BLITZER: So you want hearings? You want hearings?

LUGAR: I do. I think this is an appropriate time, without going back, and should the president ever have tried to listen to a call coming from Afghanistan, probably of course. And in the first few weeks we made many concessions in the Congress because we were at war and we were under attack. We still have the possibility of that going on, so we don’t want to obviate all of this, but I think we want to see what in the course of time really works best, and the FISA act has worked pretty well from the time of President Carter’s day to the current time.

Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME), according to a December 17 Portland (Maine) Press Herald article, “called the allegations of surveillance abuses ‘extremely troubling.’ Collins said the report ‘warrants further inquiry by Congress’ and that she has asked the NSA for a full briefing.”
Sen. John E. Sununu (R-NH) told the Manchester, New Hampshire, Union Leader, “We need to have the appropriate committees of Congress undertake hearings.” According to a December 20 Union Leader article, Sununu questioned the Bush administration’s claim that the warrantless surveillance program was covered by Congress’ post-September 11 authorization of the use of force against terrorist targets:
Sununu said at first glance, he believes “it is a little bit of a stretch” for the administration to say the surveillance program was authorized by the post-Sept. 11 resolution.

That resolution says the President “is authorized to use all necessary and appropriate force against those nations, organizations, or persons he determines planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001, or harbored such organizations or persons, in order to prevent any future acts of international terrorism against the United States by such nations, organizations or persons.”

“I don’t think the ‘use of force’ resolution authorized this use of NSA resources for domestic surveillance,” Sununu said. “This is the kind of activity that should be approved in statute.”

Sen. Larry Craig (R-ID) and Rep. C.L. “Butch” Otter (R-ID) “say they are bothered by the potential privacy abuses with warrantless wiretaps of U.S. citizens’ international communications,” according to a December 24 Associated Press report:
“I’m not in a position to say yes or no, but obviously, the president had by his interpretation the authority,” said Craig. “At the same time, I’m particularly concerned about the long-term effect of the line we may be crossing. When we flipped the FISA over from just foreign governments and known spies and blended it into a gray area of the Patriot Act, we’re now talking about somebody who we have reason to believe is connected to a foreign government, but they are a U.S. citizen.”

[…]

Otter, who represents Idaho’s western half and Panhandle in the 1st District, agreed there are good reasons to monitor telephone calls and e-mail of suspected terrorists. But he said there is a clearly established process of judicial oversight through the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) Court to obtain warrants for such wiretapping. And he is concerned that the White House appears to have circumvented that process.

“The Founders envisioned a nation where people’s privacy was respected and the government’s business was open,” Otter said in a prepared statement in response to questions from The Associated Press. “These actions turn that vision on its head. If the government is willing to bend the rules on this issue, how are we supposed to believe it won’t abuse the powers granted by the Patriot Act?”

Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) said on the December 18 broadcast of CBS’ Face the Nation that “I don’t know of any legal basis to go around” FISA’s requirement the government obtain a warrant to conduct domestic surveillance of Americans:
GRAHAM: If he has the authority to go around the FISA court, which is a court to accommodate the law of the war on terror, the FISA Act was – created a court set up by the chief justice of the United States to allow a rapid response to requests for surveillance activity in the war on terror. I don’t know of any legal basis to go around that. There may be some, but I’m not aware of it. And here’s the concern I have. We can’t become an outcome-based democracy. Even in a time of war, you have to follow the process, because that’s what a democracy is all about: a process.

Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) said on the December 18 broadcast of ABC’s This Week: “Why did the president choose not to use FISA? That’s a legitimate question.”
McCAIN: I know that the leaders of Congress were consulted, and that’s a very important part of this equation. I know that the situation has changed since September 11th. I think that we need to know, and I know these questions will be asked, and the White House will be required to answer why they didn’t go through the normal FISA, as we call it. For the benefit of our viewers that don’t know what FISA is, it’s going to a special court –

GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS (host): You go to a court and get the order.

McCAIN: – yeah, in Washington, D.C., and get the order to – to practice surveillance. We need to have that answer. But I do believe that we all know that since September 11th, we have new challenges with enemies that exist within the United States of America. So the equation has changed. Why did the president choose not to use FISA? That’s a legitimate question.

Former Rep. Bob Barr (R-GA) wrote in an article in the January 9 issue of Time magazine:
Exactly like Nixon before him, Bush has ordered the National Security Agency (NSA) to conduct electronic snooping on communications of various people, including U.S. citizens. That action is unequivocally contrary to the express and implied requirements of federal law that such surveillance of U.S. persons inside the U.S. (regardless of whether their communications are going abroad) must be preceded by a court order. General Michael Hayden, a former director of the NSA and now second in command at the new Directorate of National Intelligence, testified to precisely that point at a congressional hearing in April 2000.

[…]

Alleged associates of al-Qaeda are today’s targets of that breathtaking assertion of presidential power. Tomorrow, it may be your phone calls or e-mails that will be swept up into our electronic infrastructure and secretly kept in a growing file attached to your name. Then everyone you contact could become a suspect, a link in an ever lengthening chain that would ensnare us all in the files of the largest database ever created through unlimited electronic spying that touches every aspect of our lives.

Bruce Fein, who served as deputy attorney general for President Reagan, and Norman J. Ornstein, a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, suggested on the December 19 broadcast of the National Public Radio (NPR)-distributed Diane Rehm Show that Bush’s approval of the warrantless surveillance program may be an impeachable offense:
REHM: And here’s an email from [listener] in Breedsville, Michigan, who, picking up on the earlier conversation and earlier email, says, “So, again, is spying on the American people as impeachable an offense as lying about having sex with an intern?” Bruce.

FEIN: I think the answer requires at least in part considering what the occupant of the presidency says in the aftermath of wrongdoing or rectification. On its face, if President Bush is totally unapologetic and says I continue to maintain that as a wartime president I can do anything I want – I don’t need to consult any other branches – that is an impeachable offense. It’s more dangerous than Clinton’s lying under oath because it jeopardizes our democratic dispensation and civil liberties for the ages. It would set a precedent that, as [former Supreme Court Justice] Robert Jackson said, would lie around like a loaded gun, able to be used indefinitely for any future occupant.

REHM: Norm Ornstein.

ORNSTEIN: Well, I think if we’re going to be intellectually honest here, this really is the kind of thing that Alexander Hamilton was referring to when impeachment was discussed. In an ideal – not quite ideal – but I think the best way to handle this at this point would be for Congress to re-pass FISA. Send it to the president. If he believes in what he believes, let him veto it. They’ll override that veto. Then if he continues to do what he’s been doing, you move to a very different level of confrontation.

In a December 20 Washington Times column, Fein stated:

President Bush presents a clear and present danger to the rule of law. He cannot be trusted to conduct the war against global terrorism with a decent respect for civil liberties and checks against executive abuses. Congress should swiftly enact a code that would require Mr. Bush to obtain legislative consent for every counterterrorism measure that would materially impair individual freedoms.

[…]

The president maintained that, “As a result [of the NSA disclosure], our enemies have learned information they should not have, and the unauthorized disclosure of this effort damages our national security and puts our citizens at risk.” But if secrecy were pivotal to the NSA’s surveillance, why is the president continuing the eavesdropping? And why is he so carefree about risking the liberties of both the living and those yet to be born by flouting the Constitution’s separation of powers and conflating constructive criticism with treason?

In a December 28 Washington Times column, Fein added:

Volumes of war powers nonsense have been assembled to defend Mr. Bush’s defiance of the legislative branch and claim of wartime omnipotence so long as terrorism persists, i.e., in perpetuity. Congress should undertake a national inquest into his conduct and claims to determine whether impeachable usurpations are at hand. As Alexander Hamilton explained in Federalist 65, impeachment lies for “abuse or violation of some public trust,” misbehaviors that “relate chiefly to injuries done immediately to the society itself.”

[…]

Congress should insist the president cease the spying unless or until a proper statute is enacted or face possible impeachment. The Constitution’s separation of powers is too important to be discarded in the name of expediency.

William Safire, a former speechwriter for President Nixon, wrote in his December 30, 2005, New York Times column, which was in the form of a “Beat the Pundit” questionnaire:
The Robertscalito court will: (a) in the Texas case disengage from involvement in states’ redistricting; (b) go the other way in Oregon, holding that federal power to prohibit substances trumps a state’s authority to permit physician-assisted suicide; (c) decide that federal funds can be denied to law schools that prohibit military recruitment on campus; (d) uphold McCain-Feingold, enabling Congress to restrict political contributions but not expenditures; (e) reassert citizens’ Fourth Amendment protection from “security letters” and warrantless surveillance.

In an appearance on the January 1 broadcast of NBC’s Meet the Press, Safire added in reference to Bush’s surveillance program:

SAFIRE: During wartime, we have this excess of security, and afterwards we apologize. And that’s why I offended a lot of my conservative and hard-line friends right after September 11th, when they started putting these captured combatants in jail, and said the president can’t seize dictatorial power. And a lot of my friends looked at me like I was going batty. But now we see this argument over excessive security, and I’m with the critics on that.

Washington Post columnist George F. Will wrote in his December 20 column:
On the assumption that Congress or a court would have been cooperative in September 2001, and that the cooperation could have kept necessary actions clearly lawful without conferring any benefit on the nation’s enemies, the president’s decision to authorize the NSA’s surveillance without the complicity of a court or Congress was a mistake. Perhaps one caused by this administration’s almost metabolic urge to keep Congress unnecessarily distant and hence disgruntled.

Robert A. Levy, a senior fellow in constitutional studies at the libertarian Cato Institute and a Federalist Society member, in a question-and-answer exchange with Federalist Society member David B. Rivkin Jr.:
RIVKIN: Why can’t the President’s use of warrantless surveillance in this instance be justified under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), especially since FISA requires a “reasonable expectation of privacy” to exist before a FISA warrant is required?

LEVY: The text of FISA §1809 is unambiguous: “A person is guilty of an offense if he intentionally engages in electronic surveillance … except as authorized by statute.” That provision covers communications from or to U.S. citizens or permanent resident aliens in the United States. Moreover, Title III (the Wiretap Act) further provides that “procedures in this chapter and the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 shall be the exclusive means by which electronic surveillance … may be conducted.”

To be sure, FISA’s prohibition on unauthorized electronic surveillance applies “under circumstances in which a person has a reasonable expectation of privacy and a warrant would be required for law enforcement purposes.” §1801(f). Surely, U.S. citizens and permanent resident aliens have a reasonable expectation of privacy in their international phone calls and emails. Accordingly, warrants would be required for law enforcement purposes and, therefore, warrantless surveillance absent an authorizing statute would violate the FISA requirement.

I know of no court case that has denied there is a reasonable expectation of privacy by U.S. citizens and permanent resident aliens in the types of wire communications that are reportedly monitored by the NSA’s electronic surveillance program. Perhaps there are some international satellite or radio communications that do not come under FISA’s prohibition because the correspondents could not reasonably expect privacy. But the president has made no such showing to Congress, the courts, or the public.

Chicago Tribune columnist Steve Chapman – who in an October 24, 2004, column identified himself as “a small-government, pro-life libertarian” despite his support for then-presidential candidate Sen. John Kerry (D-MA) – wrote in his December 25 column:
The disclosure that the president authorized secret and probably illegal monitoring of communications between people in the United States and people overseas again raises the question: Why?

The government easily could have gotten search warrants to conduct electronic surveillance of anyone with the slightest possible connection to terrorists. The court that handles such requests hardly ever refuses. But Bush bridles at the notion that the president should ever have to ask permission of anyone.

[…]

What we have now is not a robust executive but a reckless one. At times like this, it’s apparent that Cheney and Bush want more power not because they need it to protect the nation, but because they want more power. Another paradox: In their conduct of the war on terror, they expect our trust, but they can’t be bothered to earn it.

At least six newspaper editorial boards that endorsed Bush in 2004 have raised objections to his warrantless domestic surveillance program:

Houston Chronicle, December 17:
You can’t take your eyes off this crowd for a second. No sooner had President Bush, out of no motivation beyond political necessity, capitulated on the McCain anti-torture proviso than the New York Times reported that for more than three years Bush has authorized warrantless domestic eavesdropping. What will crawl out from under the Oval Office rug next? What constitutional mutation will come to light? What new way will be found to diminish distinctions between a free society and the benighted civilization terrorists want to impose?

Chicago Tribune, December 19:
This [wiretapping] may also be a violation of American law, which requires that a special court issue warrants for wiretaps on communications originating in the United States. Some officials familiar with the program said it is illegal. But a Justice Department memo took the radical position that the congressional resolution authorizing the president to act against Al Qaeda enabled him to use methods that were previously forbidden.

On Saturday, President Bush strongly defended the program, saying it has “helped detect and prevent possible terrorist attacks” here and abroad. Had the administration really believed it had congressional consent for spying on Americans at home, it could have asked for legislation to affirm that. It didn’t, for the obvious reason that Congress would not have agreed.

The San Diego Union-Tribune, December 20:
We are inclined to accept the administration’s contention that the warrantless searches have been employed only in a limited number of cases involving persons with links to al-Qaeda. Nevertheless, the real danger here is that there is absolutely no oversight of the NSA’s surveillance program, and therefore absolutely no safeguard against abuses in the future.

Do we really want to trust this administration – and every one that follows it – to engage in secret spying on Americans? Should any government be trusted with absolute power to eavesdrop on its citizens without any checks imposed by law and without any judicial review?

The Denver Post, December 21:
In this time of heightened risk, there is a deep need for spying. But it should be done within the law. Bush himself said in April 2004 that “When we’re talking about chasing down terrorists, we’re talking about getting a court order before we do so.” The White House said the president’s comments applied to roving wiretaps allowed under the Patriot Act, not eavesdropping for foreign intelligence. No wonder the Senate moderates want safeguards.

The Columbus (Ohio) Dispatch, December 22:
Bush was defiant at a Monday news conference, saying the warrantless eavesdropping is legal and necessary to move fast enough to track the movements of people in the United States suspected of having connections to terrorism.

He said the operations curtailed terrorist activity. Federal officials said the process helped capture a Columbus trucker, Iyman Faris, who has pleaded guilty to plotting to destroy the Brooklyn Bridge.

Nevertheless, the president and his agents did not have to break the 1978 law. It contains emergency provisions that let federal agents get court approval up to 72 hours after the surveillance begins. Furthermore, the secret courts rarely have rejected requests for surveillance approval.

The Hartford Courant, December 30:
The White House insists that the president has the legal power to authorize wiretaps without warrants in emergencies. If so, why maintain the surveillance court, whose job it is to review applications for classified wiretaps?

[…]

If the White House believes FISA has become irrelevant in the post-9/11 era, it should persuade Congress to dissolve the court. Acting unilaterally without any feedback or review from a court created for that purpose runs counter to the principle of government accountability.

[quote]dermo wrote:

The problem is the potential for abuse. This is a slippery slope. What is to stop politicians from using this for partisan purposes? Does anything think that Karl Rove would shy away from such a tactic? Once it is ok for the executive branch to eavesdrop, what stops congress from eventually obtaining that power? It is the gradual erosion, played out over a siginificant amount of time, that deprives us of our rights.[/quote]

We are all concerned about the potential for abuse.

This program has bi-partisan congressional review.

This program must be renewed by the President every 45 days.

It looks like it has good oversight.

I am not sure why they don’t go through the courts, but I suspect they figured it would leak out of the courts.

I am not sure why they don’t go through the courts, but I suspect they figured it would leak out of the courts.

[/quote]

That is possible.

[quote]steveo5801 wrote:
Professor X wrote:
kroby wrote:
Hasn’t it become obvious to everyone yet that “government” has only it’s own interests in mind; regardless of the best interests of its electorate? Pulling heartstrings to get elected, all the while trodding on whatever rights/privicies one may assume they have… under the guise of the threat du jour. McCarthy, it seems, has yet to leave the building.

You would think most would understand this. Instead, we seem to get conservatives covering for every step that this administration takes instead of even worrying about their loss of freedom or erosion of rights. I am amazed that any conservative would jump forward and cover for this action. That makes no sense. Do people even bother to think for themselves anymore or is it that claiming party affiliation makes you this blind?

Prof X,

I think the same can be said of you and all of the rest of the “Bush bashers.” Do YOU think for yourself or does your party affliation or political bent direct your thinking. This does cut both ways.

Bottom line is if you want to assert that there is an absolute guarantee of a right to privacy in the U.S. Constitution then please give the reference where we may find it.

In case you cannot cite the specific language in the Consitituion where this may be found, we move on to the next level. That is, are you really serious about people having an absolute right to privacy on an oversees call with possible terrorists? You cannot be serious can you?

What next, a right of a private meeting to plot the overthrow of the U.S. government? Ludicrous!

Get your Constitutional facts straight and stop attacking others for their views on this issue. At least conservatives have a constitutional basis for their views. Do you?[/quote]

Uhhmmm…they don’t have a constitutional basis. See the DOD response to the Dewine proposal vs. what the admin now says.(hint: there’s a tiny contradiction!) And that was constitutional concern on foreigners!

The domestic surveillance program is illegal (as it now stands).

[quote]Zap Branigan wrote:
dermo wrote:

The problem is the potential for abuse. This is a slippery slope. What is to stop politicians from using this for partisan purposes? Does anything think that Karl Rove would shy away from such a tactic? Once it is ok for the executive branch to eavesdrop, what stops congress from eventually obtaining that power? It is the gradual erosion, played out over a siginificant amount of time, that deprives us of our rights.

We are all concerned about the potential for abuse.

This program has bi-partisan congressional review.

This program must be renewed by the President every 45 days.

It looks like it has good oversight.

I am not sure why they don’t go through the courts, but I suspect they figured it would leak out of the courts.

[/quote]
Renewed by the President means nothing other than he commits a felony every 45 days (bad).

The program has no oversight. (that’s what the FISA warrants would offer)

The admin has stated why they didn’t go to the courts. (it’s not leaks) They didn’t think FISA would go for:
“reasonable suspicion” vs. the constitutional “probable cause”

[quote]dermo wrote:
Explain to me why he could not get a warrant, either before or after. FISA warrants are easy to obtain. If they are not getting one, it is either because they are lazy, or have something to hide.

Here are some conservatives who have issues with the program - are Sam Brownback, George Will, Lindsay Graham, and William Saphire part of the ABB crowd?

Sens. Chuck Hagel (R-NE) and Olympia Snowe (R-ME), both members of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, signed a December 19 letter calling for immediate hearings on Bush’s surveillance program. Along with three of the committee’s Democrats, Hagel and Snowe stated:
We write to express our profound concern about recent revelations that the United States Government may have engaged in domestic electronic surveillance without appropriate legal authority. These allegations, which the President, at least in part, confirmed this weekend require immediate inquiry and action by the Senate.

We respectfully request that the Select Committee on Intelligence and the Committee on the Judiciary, which share jurisdiction and oversight of this issue, jointly undertake an inquiry into the facts and law surrounding these allegations. The overlapping jurisdiction of these two Committees is particularly critical where civil liberties and the rule of law hang in the balance.

A December 22 article in the Lincoln (Nebraska) Journal Star quoted Hagel as saying, “No president is ever above the law. … We are a nation of laws. You cannot avoid or dismiss a law.” The Journal Star added: “At issue, Hagel said, is whether the decision to order such surveillance violates a 1978 law [FISA] requiring approval by a secret U.S. foreign intelligence surveillance court.”

Senate Judiciary Committee chairman Arlen Specter (R-PA) has agreed to hold hearings on Bush surveillance program. As a December 20 New York Times article noted, Specter said he was “skeptical” of Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales’ assertion that “this electronic surveillance is within the law, has been authorized” by Congress. The Times reported:
Mr. Specter, who has said he will hold hearings on the program soon after the confirmation hearings for the Supreme Court nominee, Judge Samuel A. Alito Jr., said he did not believe the president’s decision to inform a handful of members of Congress was sufficient.

‘‘I think it does not constitute a check and balance,’’ he said. ‘‘You can’t have the administration and a select number of members alter the law. It can’t be done.’’

Sen. Richard Lugar (R-IN), on the January 1 edition of CNN’s Late Edition with Wolf Blitzer, also called for congressional hearings on Bush’s surveillance program:
BLITZER: Speaking of intercepts, how comfortable are you with the president’s now publicly acknowledged decision right after 9-11 to authorize secret wiretap surveillance of American citizens, among others, involved in overseas phone calls or e-mails or faxes without getting a formal court order?

LUGAR: Well, I can understand in the context of 9-11 that there may have been, in a common sense way, a reason why calls coming from the Middle East or Afghanistan to America might be intercepted, but I think the Congress quite rightly is trying to take a look at now the fact that we’re past 9-11, we’re going to have to live with the war on terror for a long while. And whether it’s the treatment of prisoners that we’ve been discussing, for example, or elements of the Patriot Act, likewise intercepts are going to have to be given, I think, a pretty good hearing. And what –

BLITZER: So you want hearings? You want hearings?

LUGAR: I do. I think this is an appropriate time, without going back, and should the president ever have tried to listen to a call coming from Afghanistan, probably of course. And in the first few weeks we made many concessions in the Congress because we were at war and we were under attack. We still have the possibility of that going on, so we don’t want to obviate all of this, but I think we want to see what in the course of time really works best, and the FISA act has worked pretty well from the time of President Carter’s day to the current time.

Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME), according to a December 17 Portland (Maine) Press Herald article, “called the allegations of surveillance abuses ‘extremely troubling.’ Collins said the report ‘warrants further inquiry by Congress’ and that she has asked the NSA for a full briefing.”
Sen. John E. Sununu (R-NH) told the Manchester, New Hampshire, Union Leader, “We need to have the appropriate committees of Congress undertake hearings.” According to a December 20 Union Leader article, Sununu questioned the Bush administration’s claim that the warrantless surveillance program was covered by Congress’ post-September 11 authorization of the use of force against terrorist targets:
Sununu said at first glance, he believes “it is a little bit of a stretch” for the administration to say the surveillance program was authorized by the post-Sept. 11 resolution.

That resolution says the President “is authorized to use all necessary and appropriate force against those nations, organizations, or persons he determines planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001, or harbored such organizations or persons, in order to prevent any future acts of international terrorism against the United States by such nations, organizations or persons.”

“I don’t think the ‘use of force’ resolution authorized this use of NSA resources for domestic surveillance,” Sununu said. “This is the kind of activity that should be approved in statute.”

Sen. Larry Craig (R-ID) and Rep. C.L. “Butch” Otter (R-ID) “say they are bothered by the potential privacy abuses with warrantless wiretaps of U.S. citizens’ international communications,” according to a December 24 Associated Press report:
“I’m not in a position to say yes or no, but obviously, the president had by his interpretation the authority,” said Craig. “At the same time, I’m particularly concerned about the long-term effect of the line we may be crossing. When we flipped the FISA over from just foreign governments and known spies and blended it into a gray area of the Patriot Act, we’re now talking about somebody who we have reason to believe is connected to a foreign government, but they are a U.S. citizen.”

[…]

Otter, who represents Idaho’s western half and Panhandle in the 1st District, agreed there are good reasons to monitor telephone calls and e-mail of suspected terrorists. But he said there is a clearly established process of judicial oversight through the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) Court to obtain warrants for such wiretapping. And he is concerned that the White House appears to have circumvented that process.

“The Founders envisioned a nation where people’s privacy was respected and the government’s business was open,” Otter said in a prepared statement in response to questions from The Associated Press. “These actions turn that vision on its head. If the government is willing to bend the rules on this issue, how are we supposed to believe it won’t abuse the powers granted by the Patriot Act?”

Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) said on the December 18 broadcast of CBS’ Face the Nation that “I don’t know of any legal basis to go around” FISA’s requirement the government obtain a warrant to conduct domestic surveillance of Americans:
GRAHAM: If he has the authority to go around the FISA court, which is a court to accommodate the law of the war on terror, the FISA Act was – created a court set up by the chief justice of the United States to allow a rapid response to requests for surveillance activity in the war on terror. I don’t know of any legal basis to go around that. There may be some, but I’m not aware of it. And here’s the concern I have. We can’t become an outcome-based democracy. Even in a time of war, you have to follow the process, because that’s what a democracy is all about: a process.

Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) said on the December 18 broadcast of ABC’s This Week: “Why did the president choose not to use FISA? That’s a legitimate question.”
McCAIN: I know that the leaders of Congress were consulted, and that’s a very important part of this equation. I know that the situation has changed since September 11th. I think that we need to know, and I know these questions will be asked, and the White House will be required to answer why they didn’t go through the normal FISA, as we call it. For the benefit of our viewers that don’t know what FISA is, it’s going to a special court –

GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS (host): You go to a court and get the order.

McCAIN: – yeah, in Washington, D.C., and get the order to – to practice surveillance. We need to have that answer. But I do believe that we all know that since September 11th, we have new challenges with enemies that exist within the United States of America. So the equation has changed. Why did the president choose not to use FISA? That’s a legitimate question.

Former Rep. Bob Barr (R-GA) wrote in an article in the January 9 issue of Time magazine:
Exactly like Nixon before him, Bush has ordered the National Security Agency (NSA) to conduct electronic snooping on communications of various people, including U.S. citizens. That action is unequivocally contrary to the express and implied requirements of federal law that such surveillance of U.S. persons inside the U.S. (regardless of whether their communications are going abroad) must be preceded by a court order. General Michael Hayden, a former director of the NSA and now second in command at the new Directorate of National Intelligence, testified to precisely that point at a congressional hearing in April 2000.

[…]

Alleged associates of al-Qaeda are today’s targets of that breathtaking assertion of presidential power. Tomorrow, it may be your phone calls or e-mails that will be swept up into our electronic infrastructure and secretly kept in a growing file attached to your name. Then everyone you contact could become a suspect, a link in an ever lengthening chain that would ensnare us all in the files of the largest database ever created through unlimited electronic spying that touches every aspect of our lives.

Bruce Fein, who served as deputy attorney general for President Reagan, and Norman J. Ornstein, a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, suggested on the December 19 broadcast of the National Public Radio (NPR)-distributed Diane Rehm Show that Bush’s approval of the warrantless surveillance program may be an impeachable offense:
REHM: And here’s an email from [listener] in Breedsville, Michigan, who, picking up on the earlier conversation and earlier email, says, “So, again, is spying on the American people as impeachable an offense as lying about having sex with an intern?” Bruce.

FEIN: I think the answer requires at least in part considering what the occupant of the presidency says in the aftermath of wrongdoing or rectification. On its face, if President Bush is totally unapologetic and says I continue to maintain that as a wartime president I can do anything I want – I don’t need to consult any other branches – that is an impeachable offense. It’s more dangerous than Clinton’s lying under oath because it jeopardizes our democratic dispensation and civil liberties for the ages. It would set a precedent that, as [former Supreme Court Justice] Robert Jackson said, would lie around like a loaded gun, able to be used indefinitely for any future occupant.

REHM: Norm Ornstein.

ORNSTEIN: Well, I think if we’re going to be intellectually honest here, this really is the kind of thing that Alexander Hamilton was referring to when impeachment was discussed. In an ideal – not quite ideal – but I think the best way to handle this at this point would be for Congress to re-pass FISA. Send it to the president. If he believes in what he believes, let him veto it. They’ll override that veto. Then if he continues to do what he’s been doing, you move to a very different level of confrontation.

In a December 20 Washington Times column, Fein stated:

President Bush presents a clear and present danger to the rule of law. He cannot be trusted to conduct the war against global terrorism with a decent respect for civil liberties and checks against executive abuses. Congress should swiftly enact a code that would require Mr. Bush to obtain legislative consent for every counterterrorism measure that would materially impair individual freedoms.

[…]

The president maintained that, “As a result [of the NSA disclosure], our enemies have learned information they should not have, and the unauthorized disclosure of this effort damages our national security and puts our citizens at risk.” But if secrecy were pivotal to the NSA’s surveillance, why is the president continuing the eavesdropping? And why is he so carefree about risking the liberties of both the living and those yet to be born by flouting the Constitution’s separation of powers and conflating constructive criticism with treason?

In a December 28 Washington Times column, Fein added:

Volumes of war powers nonsense have been assembled to defend Mr. Bush’s defiance of the legislative branch and claim of wartime omnipotence so long as terrorism persists, i.e., in perpetuity. Congress should undertake a national inquest into his conduct and claims to determine whether impeachable usurpations are at hand. As Alexander Hamilton explained in Federalist 65, impeachment lies for “abuse or violation of some public trust,” misbehaviors that “relate chiefly to injuries done immediately to the society itself.”

[…]

Congress should insist the president cease the spying unless or until a proper statute is enacted or face possible impeachment. The Constitution’s separation of powers is too important to be discarded in the name of expediency.

William Safire, a former speechwriter for President Nixon, wrote in his December 30, 2005, New York Times column, which was in the form of a “Beat the Pundit” questionnaire:
The Robertscalito court will: (a) in the Texas case disengage from involvement in states’ redistricting; (b) go the other way in Oregon, holding that federal power to prohibit substances trumps a state’s authority to permit physician-assisted suicide; (c) decide that federal funds can be denied to law schools that prohibit military recruitment on campus; (d) uphold McCain-Feingold, enabling Congress to restrict political contributions but not expenditures; (e) reassert citizens’ Fourth Amendment protection from “security letters” and warrantless surveillance.

In an appearance on the January 1 broadcast of NBC’s Meet the Press, Safire added in reference to Bush’s surveillance program:

SAFIRE: During wartime, we have this excess of security, and afterwards we apologize. And that’s why I offended a lot of my conservative and hard-line friends right after September 11th, when they started putting these captured combatants in jail, and said the president can’t seize dictatorial power. And a lot of my friends looked at me like I was going batty. But now we see this argument over excessive security, and I’m with the critics on that.

Washington Post columnist George F. Will wrote in his December 20 column:
On the assumption that Congress or a court would have been cooperative in September 2001, and that the cooperation could have kept necessary actions clearly lawful without conferring any benefit on the nation’s enemies, the president’s decision to authorize the NSA’s surveillance without the complicity of a court or Congress was a mistake. Perhaps one caused by this administration’s almost metabolic urge to keep Congress unnecessarily distant and hence disgruntled.

Robert A. Levy, a senior fellow in constitutional studies at the libertarian Cato Institute and a Federalist Society member, in a question-and-answer exchange with Federalist Society member David B. Rivkin Jr.:
RIVKIN: Why can’t the President’s use of warrantless surveillance in this instance be justified under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), especially since FISA requires a “reasonable expectation of privacy” to exist before a FISA warrant is required?

LEVY: The text of FISA ?1809 is unambiguous: “A person is guilty of an offense if he intentionally engages in electronic surveillance … except as authorized by statute.” That provision covers communications from or to U.S. citizens or permanent resident aliens in the United States. Moreover, Title III (the Wiretap Act) further provides that “procedures in this chapter and the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 shall be the exclusive means by which electronic surveillance … may be conducted.”

To be sure, FISA’s prohibition on unauthorized electronic surveillance applies “under circumstances in which a person has a reasonable expectation of privacy and a warrant would be required for law enforcement purposes.” ?1801(f). Surely, U.S. citizens and permanent resident aliens have a reasonable expectation of privacy in their international phone calls and emails. Accordingly, warrants would be required for law enforcement purposes and, therefore, warrantless surveillance absent an authorizing statute would violate the FISA requirement.

I know of no court case that has denied there is a reasonable expectation of privacy by U.S. citizens and permanent resident aliens in the types of wire communications that are reportedly monitored by the NSA’s electronic surveillance program. Perhaps there are some international satellite or radio communications that do not come under FISA’s prohibition because the correspondents could not reasonably expect privacy. But the president has made no such showing to Congress, the courts, or the public.

Chicago Tribune columnist Steve Chapman – who in an October 24, 2004, column identified himself as “a small-government, pro-life libertarian” despite his support for then-presidential candidate Sen. John Kerry (D-MA) – wrote in his December 25 column:
The disclosure that the president authorized secret and probably illegal monitoring of communications between people in the United States and people overseas again raises the question: Why?

The government easily could have gotten search warrants to conduct electronic surveillance of anyone with the slightest possible connection to terrorists. The court that handles such requests hardly ever refuses. But Bush bridles at the notion that the president should ever have to ask permission of anyone.

[…]

What we have now is not a robust executive but a reckless one. At times like this, it’s apparent that Cheney and Bush want more power not because they need it to protect the nation, but because they want more power. Another paradox: In their conduct of the war on terror, they expect our trust, but they can’t be bothered to earn it.

At least six newspaper editorial boards that endorsed Bush in 2004 have raised objections to his warrantless domestic surveillance program:

Houston Chronicle, December 17:
You can’t take your eyes off this crowd for a second. No sooner had President Bush, out of no motivation beyond political necessity, capitulated on the McCain anti-torture proviso than the New York Times reported that for more than three years Bush has authorized warrantless domestic eavesdropping. What will crawl out from under the Oval Office rug next? What constitutional mutation will come to light? What new way will be found to diminish distinctions between a free society and the benighted civilization terrorists want to impose?

Chicago Tribune, December 19:
This [wiretapping] may also be a violation of American law, which requires that a special court issue warrants for wiretaps on communications originating in the United States. Some officials familiar with the program said it is illegal. But a Justice Department memo took the radical position that the congressional resolution authorizing the president to act against Al Qaeda enabled him to use methods that were previously forbidden.

On Saturday, President Bush strongly defended the program, saying it has “helped detect and prevent possible terrorist attacks” here and abroad. Had the administration really believed it had congressional consent for spying on Americans at home, it could have asked for legislation to affirm that. It didn’t, for the obvious reason that Congress would not have agreed.

The San Diego Union-Tribune, December 20:
We are inclined to accept the administration’s contention that the warrantless searches have been employed only in a limited number of cases involving persons with links to al-Qaeda. Nevertheless, the real danger here is that there is absolutely no oversight of the NSA’s surveillance program, and therefore absolutely no safeguard against abuses in the future.

Do we really want to trust this administration – and every one that follows it – to engage in secret spying on Americans? Should any government be trusted with absolute power to eavesdrop on its citizens without any checks imposed by law and without any judicial review?

The Denver Post, December 21:
In this time of heightened risk, there is a deep need for spying. But it should be done within the law. Bush himself said in April 2004 that “When we’re talking about chasing down terrorists, we’re talking about getting a court order before we do so.” The White House said the president’s comments applied to roving wiretaps allowed under the Patriot Act, not eavesdropping for foreign intelligence. No wonder the Senate moderates want safeguards.

The Columbus (Ohio) Dispatch, December 22:
Bush was defiant at a Monday news conference, saying the warrantless eavesdropping is legal and necessary to move fast enough to track the movements of people in the United States suspected of having connections to terrorism.

He said the operations curtailed terrorist activity. Federal officials said the process helped capture a Columbus trucker, Iyman Faris, who has pleaded guilty to plotting to destroy the Brooklyn Bridge.

Nevertheless, the president and his agents did not have to break the 1978 law. It contains emergency provisions that let federal agents get court approval up to 72 hours after the surveillance begins. Furthermore, the secret courts rarely have rejected requests for surveillance approval.

The Hartford Courant, December 30:
The White House insists that the president has the legal power to authorize wiretaps without warrants in emergencies. If so, why maintain the surveillance court, whose job it is to review applications for classified wiretaps?

[…]

If the White House believes FISA has become irrelevant in the post-9/11 era, it should persuade Congress to dissolve the court. Acting unilaterally without any feedback or review from a court created for that purpose runs counter to the principle of government accountability.

[/quote]

That’s not what I asked – how easy it might have or might not have been to get a warrant from a court.

My challenge was simply CITE THE LAW THAT REQUIRES THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES TO OBTAIN A WARRANT FROM A COURT FOR SUCH AN ACTION.

Whether or not he COULD have obtained one is irrelevant. If, as you libs would want us to believe, the President did something “illegal” (I would guess that would mean something outside his authority as President of the U.S. and Commander in Cheif of the U.S. military)then surely you can come up with a law that overrides or amends his constitutional authority as President.

Well, where is it???

[quote]100meters wrote:
Zap Branigan wrote:
dermo wrote:

The problem is the potential for abuse. This is a slippery slope. What is to stop politicians from using this for partisan purposes? Does anything think that Karl Rove would shy away from such a tactic? Once it is ok for the executive branch to eavesdrop, what stops congress from eventually obtaining that power? It is the gradual erosion, played out over a siginificant amount of time, that deprives us of our rights.

We are all concerned about the potential for abuse.

This program has bi-partisan congressional review.

This program must be renewed by the President every 45 days.

It looks like it has good oversight.

I am not sure why they don’t go through the courts, but I suspect they figured it would leak out of the courts.

Renewed by the President means nothing other than he commits a felony every 45 days (bad).

The program has no oversight. (that’s what the FISA warrants would offer)

The admin has stated why they didn’t go to the courts. (it’s not leaks) They didn’t think FISA would go for:
“reasonable suspicion” vs. the constitutional “probable cause”[/quote]

“A felony every 45 days…”

You libs make me laugh! This actually would be funny if it were not so pathetic…then again, people who want us to have the right to consipire with terrorists over the phone are pathetic.

If he committed a felony then work for his impeachment. Otherwise shut up and support our troops and our President who has defended us against further attacks since 9/11.

[quote]100meters wrote:
Zap Branigan wrote:

We are all concerned about the potential for abuse.

This program has bi-partisan congressional review.

This program must be renewed by the President every 45 days.

It looks like it has good oversight.

I am not sure why they don’t go through the courts, but I suspect they figured it would leak out of the courts.

Renewed by the President means nothing other than he commits a felony every 45 days (bad).

The program has no oversight. (that’s what the FISA warrants would offer)

The admin has stated why they didn’t go to the courts. (it’s not leaks) They didn’t think FISA would go for:
“reasonable suspicion” vs. the constitutional “probable cause”[/quote]

It is not a felony just because you say it is. The fact that you think that way makes me wonder why I bother responding to your post.

Congressional oversight is oversight.
What is so hard to grasp about this?

[quote]steveo5801 wrote:
dermo wrote:
Explain to me why he could not get a warrant, either before or after. FISA warrants are easy to obtain. If they are not getting one, it is either because they are lazy, or have something to hide.

Here are some conservatives who have issues with the program - are Sam Brownback, George Will, Lindsay Graham, and William Saphire part of the ABB crowd?

Sens. Chuck Hagel (R-NE) and Olympia Snowe (R-ME), both members of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, signed a December 19 letter calling for immediate hearings on Bush’s surveillance program. Along with three of the committee’s Democrats, Hagel and Snowe stated:
We write to express our profound concern about recent revelations that the United States Government may have engaged in domestic electronic surveillance without appropriate legal authority. These allegations, which the President, at least in part, confirmed this weekend require immediate inquiry and action by the Senate.

We respectfully request that the Select Committee on Intelligence and the Committee on the Judiciary, which share jurisdiction and oversight of this issue, jointly undertake an inquiry into the facts and law surrounding these allegations. The overlapping jurisdiction of these two Committees is particularly critical where civil liberties and the rule of law hang in the balance.

A December 22 article in the Lincoln (Nebraska) Journal Star quoted Hagel as saying, “No president is ever above the law. … We are a nation of laws. You cannot avoid or dismiss a law.” The Journal Star added: “At issue, Hagel said, is whether the decision to order such surveillance violates a 1978 law [FISA] requiring approval by a secret U.S. foreign intelligence surveillance court.”

Senate Judiciary Committee chairman Arlen Specter (R-PA) has agreed to hold hearings on Bush surveillance program. As a December 20 New York Times article noted, Specter said he was “skeptical” of Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales’ assertion that “this electronic surveillance is within the law, has been authorized” by Congress. The Times reported:
Mr. Specter, who has said he will hold hearings on the program soon after the confirmation hearings for the Supreme Court nominee, Judge Samuel A. Alito Jr., said he did not believe the president’s decision to inform a handful of members of Congress was sufficient.

‘‘I think it does not constitute a check and balance,’’ he said. ‘‘You can’t have the administration and a select number of members alter the law. It can’t be done.’’

Sen. Richard Lugar (R-IN), on the January 1 edition of CNN’s Late Edition with Wolf Blitzer, also called for congressional hearings on Bush’s surveillance program:
BLITZER: Speaking of intercepts, how comfortable are you with the president’s now publicly acknowledged decision right after 9-11 to authorize secret wiretap surveillance of American citizens, among others, involved in overseas phone calls or e-mails or faxes without getting a formal court order?

LUGAR: Well, I can understand in the context of 9-11 that there may have been, in a common sense way, a reason why calls coming from the Middle East or Afghanistan to America might be intercepted, but I think the Congress quite rightly is trying to take a look at now the fact that we’re past 9-11, we’re going to have to live with the war on terror for a long while. And whether it’s the treatment of prisoners that we’ve been discussing, for example, or elements of the Patriot Act, likewise intercepts are going to have to be given, I think, a pretty good hearing. And what –

BLITZER: So you want hearings? You want hearings?

LUGAR: I do. I think this is an appropriate time, without going back, and should the president ever have tried to listen to a call coming from Afghanistan, probably of course. And in the first few weeks we made many concessions in the Congress because we were at war and we were under attack. We still have the possibility of that going on, so we don’t want to obviate all of this, but I think we want to see what in the course of time really works best, and the FISA act has worked pretty well from the time of President Carter’s day to the current time.

Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME), according to a December 17 Portland (Maine) Press Herald article, “called the allegations of surveillance abuses ‘extremely troubling.’ Collins said the report ‘warrants further inquiry by Congress’ and that she has asked the NSA for a full briefing.”
Sen. John E. Sununu (R-NH) told the Manchester, New Hampshire, Union Leader, “We need to have the appropriate committees of Congress undertake hearings.” According to a December 20 Union Leader article, Sununu questioned the Bush administration’s claim that the warrantless surveillance program was covered by Congress’ post-September 11 authorization of the use of force against terrorist targets:
Sununu said at first glance, he believes “it is a little bit of a stretch” for the administration to say the surveillance program was authorized by the post-Sept. 11 resolution.

That resolution says the President “is authorized to use all necessary and appropriate force against those nations, organizations, or persons he determines planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001, or harbored such organizations or persons, in order to prevent any future acts of international terrorism against the United States by such nations, organizations or persons.”

“I don’t think the ‘use of force’ resolution authorized this use of NSA resources for domestic surveillance,” Sununu said. “This is the kind of activity that should be approved in statute.”

Sen. Larry Craig (R-ID) and Rep. C.L. “Butch” Otter (R-ID) “say they are bothered by the potential privacy abuses with warrantless wiretaps of U.S. citizens’ international communications,” according to a December 24 Associated Press report:
“I’m not in a position to say yes or no, but obviously, the president had by his interpretation the authority,” said Craig. “At the same time, I’m particularly concerned about the long-term effect of the line we may be crossing. When we flipped the FISA over from just foreign governments and known spies and blended it into a gray area of the Patriot Act, we’re now talking about somebody who we have reason to believe is connected to a foreign government, but they are a U.S. citizen.”

[…]

Otter, who represents Idaho’s western half and Panhandle in the 1st District, agreed there are good reasons to monitor telephone calls and e-mail of suspected terrorists. But he said there is a clearly established process of judicial oversight through the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) Court to obtain warrants for such wiretapping. And he is concerned that the White House appears to have circumvented that process.

“The Founders envisioned a nation where people’s privacy was respected and the government’s business was open,” Otter said in a prepared statement in response to questions from The Associated Press. “These actions turn that vision on its head. If the government is willing to bend the rules on this issue, how are we supposed to believe it won’t abuse the powers granted by the Patriot Act?”

Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) said on the December 18 broadcast of CBS’ Face the Nation that “I don’t know of any legal basis to go around” FISA’s requirement the government obtain a warrant to conduct domestic surveillance of Americans:
GRAHAM: If he has the authority to go around the FISA court, which is a court to accommodate the law of the war on terror, the FISA Act was – created a court set up by the chief justice of the United States to allow a rapid response to requests for surveillance activity in the war on terror. I don’t know of any legal basis to go around that. There may be some, but I’m not aware of it. And here’s the concern I have. We can’t become an outcome-based democracy. Even in a time of war, you have to follow the process, because that’s what a democracy is all about: a process.

Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) said on the December 18 broadcast of ABC’s This Week: “Why did the president choose not to use FISA? That’s a legitimate question.”
McCAIN: I know that the leaders of Congress were consulted, and that’s a very important part of this equation. I know that the situation has changed since September 11th. I think that we need to know, and I know these questions will be asked, and the White House will be required to answer why they didn’t go through the normal FISA, as we call it. For the benefit of our viewers that don’t know what FISA is, it’s going to a special court –

GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS (host): You go to a court and get the order.

McCAIN: – yeah, in Washington, D.C., and get the order to – to practice surveillance. We need to have that answer. But I do believe that we all know that since September 11th, we have new challenges with enemies that exist within the United States of America. So the equation has changed. Why did the president choose not to use FISA? That’s a legitimate question.

Former Rep. Bob Barr (R-GA) wrote in an article in the January 9 issue of Time magazine:
Exactly like Nixon before him, Bush has ordered the National Security Agency (NSA) to conduct electronic snooping on communications of various people, including U.S. citizens. That action is unequivocally contrary to the express and implied requirements of federal law that such surveillance of U.S. persons inside the U.S. (regardless of whether their communications are going abroad) must be preceded by a court order. General Michael Hayden, a former director of the NSA and now second in command at the new Directorate of National Intelligence, testified to precisely that point at a congressional hearing in April 2000.

[…]

Alleged associates of al-Qaeda are today’s targets of that breathtaking assertion of presidential power. Tomorrow, it may be your phone calls or e-mails that will be swept up into our electronic infrastructure and secretly kept in a growing file attached to your name. Then everyone you contact could become a suspect, a link in an ever lengthening chain that would ensnare us all in the files of the largest database ever created through unlimited electronic spying that touches every aspect of our lives.

Bruce Fein, who served as deputy attorney general for President Reagan, and Norman J. Ornstein, a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, suggested on the December 19 broadcast of the National Public Radio (NPR)-distributed Diane Rehm Show that Bush’s approval of the warrantless surveillance program may be an impeachable offense:
REHM: And here’s an email from [listener] in Breedsville, Michigan, who, picking up on the earlier conversation and earlier email, says, “So, again, is spying on the American people as impeachable an offense as lying about having sex with an intern?” Bruce.

FEIN: I think the answer requires at least in part considering what the occupant of the presidency says in the aftermath of wrongdoing or rectification. On its face, if President Bush is totally unapologetic and says I continue to maintain that as a wartime president I can do anything I want – I don’t need to consult any other branches – that is an impeachable offense. It’s more dangerous than Clinton’s lying under oath because it jeopardizes our democratic dispensation and civil liberties for the ages. It would set a precedent that, as [former Supreme Court Justice] Robert Jackson said, would lie around like a loaded gun, able to be used indefinitely for any future occupant.

REHM: Norm Ornstein.

ORNSTEIN: Well, I think if we’re going to be intellectually honest here, this really is the kind of thing that Alexander Hamilton was referring to when impeachment was discussed. In an ideal – not quite ideal – but I think the best way to handle this at this point would be for Congress to re-pass FISA. Send it to the president. If he believes in what he believes, let him veto it. They’ll override that veto. Then if he continues to do what he’s been doing, you move to a very different level of confrontation.

In a December 20 Washington Times column, Fein stated:

President Bush presents a clear and present danger to the rule of law. He cannot be trusted to conduct the war against global terrorism with a decent respect for civil liberties and checks against executive abuses. Congress should swiftly enact a code that would require Mr. Bush to obtain legislative consent for every counterterrorism measure that would materially impair individual freedoms.

[…]

The president maintained that, “As a result [of the NSA disclosure], our enemies have learned information they should not have, and the unauthorized disclosure of this effort damages our national security and puts our citizens at risk.” But if secrecy were pivotal to the NSA’s surveillance, why is the president continuing the eavesdropping? And why is he so carefree about risking the liberties of both the living and those yet to be born by flouting the Constitution’s separation of powers and conflating constructive criticism with treason?

In a December 28 Washington Times column, Fein added:

Volumes of war powers nonsense have been assembled to defend Mr. Bush’s defiance of the legislative branch and claim of wartime omnipotence so long as terrorism persists, i.e., in perpetuity. Congress should undertake a national inquest into his conduct and claims to determine whether impeachable usurpations are at hand. As Alexander Hamilton explained in Federalist 65, impeachment lies for “abuse or violation of some public trust,” misbehaviors that “relate chiefly to injuries done immediately to the society itself.”

[…]

Congress should insist the president cease the spying unless or until a proper statute is enacted or face possible impeachment. The Constitution’s separation of powers is too important to be discarded in the name of expediency.

William Safire, a former speechwriter for President Nixon, wrote in his December 30, 2005, New York Times column, which was in the form of a “Beat the Pundit” questionnaire:
The Robertscalito court will: (a) in the Texas case disengage from involvement in states’ redistricting; (b) go the other way in Oregon, holding that federal power to prohibit substances trumps a state’s authority to permit physician-assisted suicide; (c) decide that federal funds can be denied to law schools that prohibit military recruitment on campus; (d) uphold McCain-Feingold, enabling Congress to restrict political contributions but not expenditures; (e) reassert citizens’ Fourth Amendment protection from “security letters” and warrantless surveillance.

In an appearance on the January 1 broadcast of NBC’s Meet the Press, Safire added in reference to Bush’s surveillance program:

SAFIRE: During wartime, we have this excess of security, and afterwards we apologize. And that’s why I offended a lot of my conservative and hard-line friends right after September 11th, when they started putting these captured combatants in jail, and said the president can’t seize dictatorial power. And a lot of my friends looked at me like I was going batty. But now we see this argument over excessive security, and I’m with the critics on that.

Washington Post columnist George F. Will wrote in his December 20 column:
On the assumption that Congress or a court would have been cooperative in September 2001, and that the cooperation could have kept necessary actions clearly lawful without conferring any benefit on the nation’s enemies, the president’s decision to authorize the NSA’s surveillance without the complicity of a court or Congress was a mistake. Perhaps one caused by this administration’s almost metabolic urge to keep Congress unnecessarily distant and hence disgruntled.

Robert A. Levy, a senior fellow in constitutional studies at the libertarian Cato Institute and a Federalist Society member, in a question-and-answer exchange with Federalist Society member David B. Rivkin Jr.:
RIVKIN: Why can’t the President’s use of warrantless surveillance in this instance be justified under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), especially since FISA requires a “reasonable expectation of privacy” to exist before a FISA warrant is required?

LEVY: The text of FISA ?1809 is unambiguous: “A person is guilty of an offense if he intentionally engages in electronic surveillance … except as authorized by statute.” That provision covers communications from or to U.S. citizens or permanent resident aliens in the United States. Moreover, Title III (the Wiretap Act) further provides that “procedures in this chapter and the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 shall be the exclusive means by which electronic surveillance … may be conducted.”

To be sure, FISA’s prohibition on unauthorized electronic surveillance applies “under circumstances in which a person has a reasonable expectation of privacy and a warrant would be required for law enforcement purposes.” ?1801(f). Surely, U.S. citizens and permanent resident aliens have a reasonable expectation of privacy in their international phone calls and emails. Accordingly, warrants would be required for law enforcement purposes and, therefore, warrantless surveillance absent an authorizing statute would violate the FISA requirement.

I know of no court case that has denied there is a reasonable expectation of privacy by U.S. citizens and permanent resident aliens in the types of wire communications that are reportedly monitored by the NSA’s electronic surveillance program. Perhaps there are some international satellite or radio communications that do not come under FISA’s prohibition because the correspondents could not reasonably expect privacy. But the president has made no such showing to Congress, the courts, or the public.

Chicago Tribune columnist Steve Chapman – who in an October 24, 2004, column identified himself as “a small-government, pro-life libertarian” despite his support for then-presidential candidate Sen. John Kerry (D-MA) – wrote in his December 25 column:
The disclosure that the president authorized secret and probably illegal monitoring of communications between people in the United States and people overseas again raises the question: Why?

The government easily could have gotten search warrants to conduct electronic surveillance of anyone with the slightest possible connection to terrorists. The court that handles such requests hardly ever refuses. But Bush bridles at the notion that the president should ever have to ask permission of anyone.

[…]

What we have now is not a robust executive but a reckless one. At times like this, it’s apparent that Cheney and Bush want more power not because they need it to protect the nation, but because they want more power. Another paradox: In their conduct of the war on terror, they expect our trust, but they can’t be bothered to earn it.

At least six newspaper editorial boards that endorsed Bush in 2004 have raised objections to his warrantless domestic surveillance program:

Houston Chronicle, December 17:
You can’t take your eyes off this crowd for a second. No sooner had President Bush, out of no motivation beyond political necessity, capitulated on the McCain anti-torture proviso than the New York Times reported that for more than three years Bush has authorized warrantless domestic eavesdropping. What will crawl out from under the Oval Office rug next? What constitutional mutation will come to light? What new way will be found to diminish distinctions between a free society and the benighted civilization terrorists want to impose?

Chicago Tribune, December 19:
This [wiretapping] may also be a violation of American law, which requires that a special court issue warrants for wiretaps on communications originating in the United States. Some officials familiar with the program said it is illegal. But a Justice Department memo took the radical position that the congressional resolution authorizing the president to act against Al Qaeda enabled him to use methods that were previously forbidden.

On Saturday, President Bush strongly defended the program, saying it has “helped detect and prevent possible terrorist attacks” here and abroad. Had the administration really believed it had congressional consent for spying on Americans at home, it could have asked for legislation to affirm that. It didn’t, for the obvious reason that Congress would not have agreed.

The San Diego Union-Tribune, December 20:
We are inclined to accept the administration’s contention that the warrantless searches have been employed only in a limited number of cases involving persons with links to al-Qaeda. Nevertheless, the real danger here is that there is absolutely no oversight of the NSA’s surveillance program, and therefore absolutely no safeguard against abuses in the future.

Do we really want to trust this administration – and every one that follows it – to engage in secret spying on Americans? Should any government be trusted with absolute power to eavesdrop on its citizens without any checks imposed by law and without any judicial review?

The Denver Post, December 21:
In this time of heightened risk, there is a deep need for spying. But it should be done within the law. Bush himself said in April 2004 that “When we’re talking about chasing down terrorists, we’re talking about getting a court order before we do so.” The White House said the president’s comments applied to roving wiretaps allowed under the Patriot Act, not eavesdropping for foreign intelligence. No wonder the Senate moderates want safeguards.

The Columbus (Ohio) Dispatch, December 22:
Bush was defiant at a Monday news conference, saying the warrantless eavesdropping is legal and necessary to move fast enough to track the movements of people in the United States suspected of having connections to terrorism.

He said the operations curtailed terrorist activity. Federal officials said the process helped capture a Columbus trucker, Iyman Faris, who has pleaded guilty to plotting to destroy the Brooklyn Bridge.

Nevertheless, the president and his agents did not have to break the 1978 law. It contains emergency provisions that let federal agents get court approval up to 72 hours after the surveillance begins. Furthermore, the secret courts rarely have rejected requests for surveillance approval.

The Hartford Courant, December 30:
The White House insists that the president has the legal power to authorize wiretaps without warrants in emergencies. If so, why maintain the surveillance court, whose job it is to review applications for classified wiretaps?

[…]

If the White House believes FISA has become irrelevant in the post-9/11 era, it should persuade Congress to dissolve the court. Acting unilaterally without any feedback or review from a court created for that purpose runs counter to the principle of government accountability.

That’s not what I asked – how easy it might have or might not have been to get a warrant from a court.

My challenge was simply CITE THE LAW THAT REQUIRES THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES TO OBTAIN A WARRANT FROM A COURT FOR SUCH AN ACTION.

Whether or not he COULD have obtained one is irrelevant. If, as you libs would want us to believe, the President did something “illegal” (I would guess that would mean something outside his authority as President of the U.S. and Commander in Cheif of the U.S. military)then surely you can come up with a law that overrides or amends his constitutional authority as President.

Well, where is it???
[/quote]

It’s called FISA. See newspapers, news, etc.

[quote]steveo5801 wrote:
100meters wrote:
Zap Branigan wrote:
dermo wrote:

The problem is the potential for abuse. This is a slippery slope. What is to stop politicians from using this for partisan purposes? Does anything think that Karl Rove would shy away from such a tactic? Once it is ok for the executive branch to eavesdrop, what stops congress from eventually obtaining that power? It is the gradual erosion, played out over a siginificant amount of time, that deprives us of our rights.

We are all concerned about the potential for abuse.

This program has bi-partisan congressional review.

This program must be renewed by the President every 45 days.

It looks like it has good oversight.

I am not sure why they don’t go through the courts, but I suspect they figured it would leak out of the courts.

Renewed by the President means nothing other than he commits a felony every 45 days (bad).

The program has no oversight. (that’s what the FISA warrants would offer)

The admin has stated why they didn’t go to the courts. (it’s not leaks) They didn’t think FISA would go for:
“reasonable suspicion” vs. the constitutional “probable cause”

“A felony every 45 days…”

You libs make me laugh! This actually would be funny if it were not so pathetic…then again, people who want us to have the right to consipire with terrorists over the phone are pathetic.

If he committed a felony then work for his impeachment. Otherwise shut up and support our troops and our President who has defended us against further attacks since 9/11.[/quote]

Again, this has nothing at all to do with liberalism. And of course it has nothing at all to do with the “right to conspire with terrorists over the phone”. The actual issue (do you have access to a T.V., internet, or newspaper) is illegally eavesdropping on americans. Supporting the troops is something liberals want the president to do (he’s against it by the way), and for the millionth time terrorism round the world is up,up,up and away higher under Bush. Oh, and 9/11 happened under Bush(Remember the PDB: osama determined to strike the u.s. which Condi lied about, and the President didn’t care about. Remember Cheney’s terrorism task force that held, what was it, oh yeah zero meetings?)

Also when fighting terror, a president wouldn’t normally create a new terrorist training ground, wouldn’t stretch military to the breaking point, etc.,etc.,etc.

Please, to sound less informed, by all means pay attention to current events. Good lord!

[quote]Zap Branigan wrote:
100meters wrote:
Zap Branigan wrote:

We are all concerned about the potential for abuse.

This program has bi-partisan congressional review.

This program must be renewed by the President every 45 days.

It looks like it has good oversight.

I am not sure why they don’t go through the courts, but I suspect they figured it would leak out of the courts.

Renewed by the President means nothing other than he commits a felony every 45 days (bad).

The program has no oversight. (that’s what the FISA warrants would offer)

The admin has stated why they didn’t go to the courts. (it’s not leaks) They didn’t think FISA would go for:
“reasonable suspicion” vs. the constitutional “probable cause”

It is not a felony just because you say it is. The fact that you think that way makes me wonder why I bother responding to your post.

Congressional oversight is oversight.
What is so hard to grasp about this?

[/quote]

There is no congressional oversight. Maybe 7 dems were “briefed”. 3 immediately objected, the others were not informed enough to make an opinion. Nobody was informed according the standards of the National security act.(also against the law). So it’s not hard to grasp, you just have not grasped it yet.

FISA by the way is the law. Which the admin has admitted the program would fall under (see Gonzales). FISA is the sole means for electronic eavesdropping. It requires warrants which the admin is not obtaining. Hence, breaking the law.

[
Again, this has nothing at all to do with liberalism. And of course it has nothing at all to do with the “right to conspire with terrorists over the phone”.

****100 Meters, since you are so smart, does it have anything to do with:

“Slick Willy was having his “slacks adjusted” in the Oval Office by a young bimbo”

Seems no one has a counterpoint for this component of the argument. Obviously any serious debate on the NSA spying issue has to begin, and probably end, with Clinton’s blowjob.

[quote]steveo5801 wrote:
dermo wrote:
Explain to me why he could not get a warrant, either before or after. FISA warrants are easy to obtain. If they are not getting one, it is either because they are lazy, or have something to hide.

Here are some conservatives who have issues with the program - are Sam Brownback, George Will, Lindsay Graham, and William Saphire part of the ABB crowd?

Sens. Chuck Hagel (R-NE) and Olympia Snowe (R-ME), both members of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, signed a December 19 letter calling for immediate hearings on Bush’s surveillance program. Along with three of the committee’s Democrats, Hagel and Snowe stated:
We write to express our profound concern about recent revelations that the United States Government may have engaged in domestic electronic surveillance without appropriate legal authority. These allegations, which the President, at least in part, confirmed this weekend require immediate inquiry and action by the Senate.

We respectfully request that the Select Committee on Intelligence and the Committee on the Judiciary, which share jurisdiction and oversight of this issue, jointly undertake an inquiry into the facts and law surrounding these allegations. The overlapping jurisdiction of these two Committees is particularly critical where civil liberties and the rule of law hang in the balance.

A December 22 article in the Lincoln (Nebraska) Journal Star quoted Hagel as saying, “No president is ever above the law. … We are a nation of laws. You cannot avoid or dismiss a law.” The Journal Star added: “At issue, Hagel said, is whether the decision to order such surveillance violates a 1978 law [FISA] requiring approval by a secret U.S. foreign intelligence surveillance court.”

Senate Judiciary Committee chairman Arlen Specter (R-PA) has agreed to hold hearings on Bush surveillance program. As a December 20 New York Times article noted, Specter said he was “skeptical” of Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales’ assertion that “this electronic surveillance is within the law, has been authorized” by Congress. The Times reported:
Mr. Specter, who has said he will hold hearings on the program soon after the confirmation hearings for the Supreme Court nominee, Judge Samuel A. Alito Jr., said he did not believe the president’s decision to inform a handful of members of Congress was sufficient.

‘‘I think it does not constitute a check and balance,’’ he said. ‘‘You can’t have the administration and a select number of members alter the law. It can’t be done.’’

Sen. Richard Lugar (R-IN), on the January 1 edition of CNN’s Late Edition with Wolf Blitzer, also called for congressional hearings on Bush’s surveillance program:
BLITZER: Speaking of intercepts, how comfortable are you with the president’s now publicly acknowledged decision right after 9-11 to authorize secret wiretap surveillance of American citizens, among others, involved in overseas phone calls or e-mails or faxes without getting a formal court order?

LUGAR: Well, I can understand in the context of 9-11 that there may have been, in a common sense way, a reason why calls coming from the Middle East or Afghanistan to America might be intercepted, but I think the Congress quite rightly is trying to take a look at now the fact that we’re past 9-11, we’re going to have to live with the war on terror for a long while. And whether it’s the treatment of prisoners that we’ve been discussing, for example, or elements of the Patriot Act, likewise intercepts are going to have to be given, I think, a pretty good hearing. And what –

BLITZER: So you want hearings? You want hearings?

LUGAR: I do. I think this is an appropriate time, without going back, and should the president ever have tried to listen to a call coming from Afghanistan, probably of course. And in the first few weeks we made many concessions in the Congress because we were at war and we were under attack. We still have the possibility of that going on, so we don’t want to obviate all of this, but I think we want to see what in the course of time really works best, and the FISA act has worked pretty well from the time of President Carter’s day to the current time.

Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME), according to a December 17 Portland (Maine) Press Herald article, “called the allegations of surveillance abuses ‘extremely troubling.’ Collins said the report ‘warrants further inquiry by Congress’ and that she has asked the NSA for a full briefing.”
Sen. John E. Sununu (R-NH) told the Manchester, New Hampshire, Union Leader, “We need to have the appropriate committees of Congress undertake hearings.” According to a December 20 Union Leader article, Sununu questioned the Bush administration’s claim that the warrantless surveillance program was covered by Congress’ post-September 11 authorization of the use of force against terrorist targets:
Sununu said at first glance, he believes “it is a little bit of a stretch” for the administration to say the surveillance program was authorized by the post-Sept. 11 resolution.

That resolution says the President “is authorized to use all necessary and appropriate force against those nations, organizations, or persons he determines planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001, or harbored such organizations or persons, in order to prevent any future acts of international terrorism against the United States by such nations, organizations or persons.”

“I don’t think the ‘use of force’ resolution authorized this use of NSA resources for domestic surveillance,” Sununu said. “This is the kind of activity that should be approved in statute.”

Sen. Larry Craig (R-ID) and Rep. C.L. “Butch” Otter (R-ID) “say they are bothered by the potential privacy abuses with warrantless wiretaps of U.S. citizens’ international communications,” according to a December 24 Associated Press report:
“I’m not in a position to say yes or no, but obviously, the president had by his interpretation the authority,” said Craig. “At the same time, I’m particularly concerned about the long-term effect of the line we may be crossing. When we flipped the FISA over from just foreign governments and known spies and blended it into a gray area of the Patriot Act, we’re now talking about somebody who we have reason to believe is connected to a foreign government, but they are a U.S. citizen.”

[…]

Otter, who represents Idaho’s western half and Panhandle in the 1st District, agreed there are good reasons to monitor telephone calls and e-mail of suspected terrorists. But he said there is a clearly established process of judicial oversight through the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) Court to obtain warrants for such wiretapping. And he is concerned that the White House appears to have circumvented that process.

“The Founders envisioned a nation where people’s privacy was respected and the government’s business was open,” Otter said in a prepared statement in response to questions from The Associated Press. “These actions turn that vision on its head. If the government is willing to bend the rules on this issue, how are we supposed to believe it won’t abuse the powers granted by the Patriot Act?”

Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) said on the December 18 broadcast of CBS’ Face the Nation that “I don’t know of any legal basis to go around” FISA’s requirement the government obtain a warrant to conduct domestic surveillance of Americans:
GRAHAM: If he has the authority to go around the FISA court, which is a court to accommodate the law of the war on terror, the FISA Act was – created a court set up by the chief justice of the United States to allow a rapid response to requests for surveillance activity in the war on terror. I don’t know of any legal basis to go around that. There may be some, but I’m not aware of it. And here’s the concern I have. We can’t become an outcome-based democracy. Even in a time of war, you have to follow the process, because that’s what a democracy is all about: a process.

Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) said on the December 18 broadcast of ABC’s This Week: “Why did the president choose not to use FISA? That’s a legitimate question.”
McCAIN: I know that the leaders of Congress were consulted, and that’s a very important part of this equation. I know that the situation has changed since September 11th. I think that we need to know, and I know these questions will be asked, and the White House will be required to answer why they didn’t go through the normal FISA, as we call it. For the benefit of our viewers that don’t know what FISA is, it’s going to a special court –

GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS (host): You go to a court and get the order.

McCAIN: – yeah, in Washington, D.C., and get the order to – to practice surveillance. We need to have that answer. But I do believe that we all know that since September 11th, we have new challenges with enemies that exist within the United States of America. So the equation has changed. Why did the president choose not to use FISA? That’s a legitimate question.

Former Rep. Bob Barr (R-GA) wrote in an article in the January 9 issue of Time magazine:
Exactly like Nixon before him, Bush has ordered the National Security Agency (NSA) to conduct electronic snooping on communications of various people, including U.S. citizens. That action is unequivocally contrary to the express and implied requirements of federal law that such surveillance of U.S. persons inside the U.S. (regardless of whether their communications are going abroad) must be preceded by a court order. General Michael Hayden, a former director of the NSA and now second in command at the new Directorate of National Intelligence, testified to precisely that point at a congressional hearing in April 2000.

[…]

Alleged associates of al-Qaeda are today’s targets of that breathtaking assertion of presidential power. Tomorrow, it may be your phone calls or e-mails that will be swept up into our electronic infrastructure and secretly kept in a growing file attached to your name. Then everyone you contact could become a suspect, a link in an ever lengthening chain that would ensnare us all in the files of the largest database ever created through unlimited electronic spying that touches every aspect of our lives.

Bruce Fein, who served as deputy attorney general for President Reagan, and Norman J. Ornstein, a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, suggested on the December 19 broadcast of the National Public Radio (NPR)-distributed Diane Rehm Show that Bush’s approval of the warrantless surveillance program may be an impeachable offense:
REHM: And here’s an email from [listener] in Breedsville, Michigan, who, picking up on the earlier conversation and earlier email, says, “So, again, is spying on the American people as impeachable an offense as lying about having sex with an intern?” Bruce.

FEIN: I think the answer requires at least in part considering what the occupant of the presidency says in the aftermath of wrongdoing or rectification. On its face, if President Bush is totally unapologetic and says I continue to maintain that as a wartime president I can do anything I want – I don’t need to consult any other branches – that is an impeachable offense. It’s more dangerous than Clinton’s lying under oath because it jeopardizes our democratic dispensation and civil liberties for the ages. It would set a precedent that, as [former Supreme Court Justice] Robert Jackson said, would lie around like a loaded gun, able to be used indefinitely for any future occupant.

REHM: Norm Ornstein.

ORNSTEIN: Well, I think if we’re going to be intellectually honest here, this really is the kind of thing that Alexander Hamilton was referring to when impeachment was discussed. In an ideal – not quite ideal – but I think the best way to handle this at this point would be for Congress to re-pass FISA. Send it to the president. If he believes in what he believes, let him veto it. They’ll override that veto. Then if he continues to do what he’s been doing, you move to a very different level of confrontation.

In a December 20 Washington Times column, Fein stated:

President Bush presents a clear and present danger to the rule of law. He cannot be trusted to conduct the war against global terrorism with a decent respect for civil liberties and checks against executive abuses. Congress should swiftly enact a code that would require Mr. Bush to obtain legislative consent for every counterterrorism measure that would materially impair individual freedoms.

[…]

The president maintained that, “As a result [of the NSA disclosure], our enemies have learned information they should not have, and the unauthorized disclosure of this effort damages our national security and puts our citizens at risk.” But if secrecy were pivotal to the NSA’s surveillance, why is the president continuing the eavesdropping? And why is he so carefree about risking the liberties of both the living and those yet to be born by flouting the Constitution’s separation of powers and conflating constructive criticism with treason?

In a December 28 Washington Times column, Fein added:

Volumes of war powers nonsense have been assembled to defend Mr. Bush’s defiance of the legislative branch and claim of wartime omnipotence so long as terrorism persists, i.e., in perpetuity. Congress should undertake a national inquest into his conduct and claims to determine whether impeachable usurpations are at hand. As Alexander Hamilton explained in Federalist 65, impeachment lies for “abuse or violation of some public trust,” misbehaviors that “relate chiefly to injuries done immediately to the society itself.”

[…]

Congress should insist the president cease the spying unless or until a proper statute is enacted or face possible impeachment. The Constitution’s separation of powers is too important to be discarded in the name of expediency.

William Safire, a former speechwriter for President Nixon, wrote in his December 30, 2005, New York Times column, which was in the form of a “Beat the Pundit” questionnaire:
The Robertscalito court will: (a) in the Texas case disengage from involvement in states’ redistricting; (b) go the other way in Oregon, holding that federal power to prohibit substances trumps a state’s authority to permit physician-assisted suicide; (c) decide that federal funds can be denied to law schools that prohibit military recruitment on campus; (d) uphold McCain-Feingold, enabling Congress to restrict political contributions but not expenditures; (e) reassert citizens’ Fourth Amendment protection from “security letters” and warrantless surveillance.

In an appearance on the January 1 broadcast of NBC’s Meet the Press, Safire added in reference to Bush’s surveillance program:

SAFIRE: During wartime, we have this excess of security, and afterwards we apologize. And that’s why I offended a lot of my conservative and hard-line friends right after September 11th, when they started putting these captured combatants in jail, and said the president can’t seize dictatorial power. And a lot of my friends looked at me like I was going batty. But now we see this argument over excessive security, and I’m with the critics on that.

Washington Post columnist George F. Will wrote in his December 20 column:
On the assumption that Congress or a court would have been cooperative in September 2001, and that the cooperation could have kept necessary actions clearly lawful without conferring any benefit on the nation’s enemies, the president’s decision to authorize the NSA’s surveillance without the complicity of a court or Congress was a mistake. Perhaps one caused by this administration’s almost metabolic urge to keep Congress unnecessarily distant and hence disgruntled.

Robert A. Levy, a senior fellow in constitutional studies at the libertarian Cato Institute and a Federalist Society member, in a question-and-answer exchange with Federalist Society member David B. Rivkin Jr.:
RIVKIN: Why can’t the President’s use of warrantless surveillance in this instance be justified under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), especially since FISA requires a “reasonable expectation of privacy” to exist before a FISA warrant is required?

LEVY: The text of FISA ?1809 is unambiguous: “A person is guilty of an offense if he intentionally engages in electronic surveillance … except as authorized by statute.” That provision covers communications from or to U.S. citizens or permanent resident aliens in the United States. Moreover, Title III (the Wiretap Act) further provides that “procedures in this chapter and the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 shall be the exclusive means by which electronic surveillance … may be conducted.”

To be sure, FISA’s prohibition on unauthorized electronic surveillance applies “under circumstances in which a person has a reasonable expectation of privacy and a warrant would be required for law enforcement purposes.” ?1801(f). Surely, U.S. citizens and permanent resident aliens have a reasonable expectation of privacy in their international phone calls and emails. Accordingly, warrants would be required for law enforcement purposes and, therefore, warrantless surveillance absent an authorizing statute would violate the FISA requirement.

I know of no court case that has denied there is a reasonable expectation of privacy by U.S. citizens and permanent resident aliens in the types of wire communications that are reportedly monitored by the NSA’s electronic surveillance program. Perhaps there are some international satellite or radio communications that do not come under FISA’s prohibition because the correspondents could not reasonably expect privacy. But the president has made no such showing to Congress, the courts, or the public.

Chicago Tribune columnist Steve Chapman – who in an October 24, 2004, column identified himself as “a small-government, pro-life libertarian” despite his support for then-presidential candidate Sen. John Kerry (D-MA) – wrote in his December 25 column:
The disclosure that the president authorized secret and probably illegal monitoring of communications between people in the United States and people overseas again raises the question: Why?

The government easily could have gotten search warrants to conduct electronic surveillance of anyone with the slightest possible connection to terrorists. The court that handles such requests hardly ever refuses. But Bush bridles at the notion that the president should ever have to ask permission of anyone.

[…]

What we have now is not a robust executive but a reckless one. At times like this, it’s apparent that Cheney and Bush want more power not because they need it to protect the nation, but because they want more power. Another paradox: In their conduct of the war on terror, they expect our trust, but they can’t be bothered to earn it.

At least six newspaper editorial boards that endorsed Bush in 2004 have raised objections to his warrantless domestic surveillance program:

Houston Chronicle, December 17:
You can’t take your eyes off this crowd for a second. No sooner had President Bush, out of no motivation beyond political necessity, capitulated on the McCain anti-torture proviso than the New York Times reported that for more than three years Bush has authorized warrantless domestic eavesdropping. What will crawl out from under the Oval Office rug next? What constitutional mutation will come to light? What new way will be found to diminish distinctions between a free society and the benighted civilization terrorists want to impose?

Chicago Tribune, December 19:
This [wiretapping] may also be a violation of American law, which requires that a special court issue warrants for wiretaps on communications originating in the United States. Some officials familiar with the program said it is illegal. But a Justice Department memo took the radical position that the congressional resolution authorizing the president to act against Al Qaeda enabled him to use methods that were previously forbidden.

On Saturday, President Bush strongly defended the program, saying it has “helped detect and prevent possible terrorist attacks” here and abroad. Had the administration really believed it had congressional consent for spying on Americans at home, it could have asked for legislation to affirm that. It didn’t, for the obvious reason that Congress would not have agreed.

The San Diego Union-Tribune, December 20:
We are inclined to accept the administration’s contention that the warrantless searches have been employed only in a limited number of cases involving persons with links to al-Qaeda. Nevertheless, the real danger here is that there is absolutely no oversight of the NSA’s surveillance program, and therefore absolutely no safeguard against abuses in the future.

Do we really want to trust this administration – and every one that follows it – to engage in secret spying on Americans? Should any government be trusted with absolute power to eavesdrop on its citizens without any checks imposed by law and without any judicial review?

The Denver Post, December 21:
In this time of heightened risk, there is a deep need for spying. But it should be done within the law. Bush himself said in April 2004 that “When we’re talking about chasing down terrorists, we’re talking about getting a court order before we do so.” The White House said the president’s comments applied to roving wiretaps allowed under the Patriot Act, not eavesdropping for foreign intelligence. No wonder the Senate moderates want safeguards.

The Columbus (Ohio) Dispatch, December 22:
Bush was defiant at a Monday news conference, saying the warrantless eavesdropping is legal and necessary to move fast enough to track the movements of people in the United States suspected of having connections to terrorism.

He said the operations curtailed terrorist activity. Federal officials said the process helped capture a Columbus trucker, Iyman Faris, who has pleaded guilty to plotting to destroy the Brooklyn Bridge.

Nevertheless, the president and his agents did not have to break the 1978 law. It contains emergency provisions that let federal agents get court approval up to 72 hours after the surveillance begins. Furthermore, the secret courts rarely have rejected requests for surveillance approval.

The Hartford Courant, December 30:
The White House insists that the president has the legal power to authorize wiretaps without warrants in emergencies. If so, why maintain the surveillance court, whose job it is to review applications for classified wiretaps?

[…]

If the White House believes FISA has become irrelevant in the post-9/11 era, it should persuade Congress to dissolve the court. Acting unilaterally without any feedback or review from a court created for that purpose runs counter to the principle of government accountability.

That’s not what I asked – how easy it might have or might not have been to get a warrant from a court.

My challenge was simply CITE THE LAW THAT REQUIRES THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES TO OBTAIN A WARRANT FROM A COURT FOR SUCH AN ACTION.

Whether or not he COULD have obtained one is irrelevant. If, as you libs would want us to believe, the President did something “illegal” (I would guess that would mean something outside his authority as President of the U.S. and Commander in Cheif of the U.S. military)then surely you can come up with a law that overrides or amends his constitutional authority as President.

Well, where is it???
[/quote]

Um, it is about 2 inches above your post:
The text of FISA ?1809 is unambiguous: “A person is guilty of an offense if he intentionally engages in electronic surveillance … except as authorized by statute.” That provision covers communications from or to U.S. citizens or permanent resident aliens in the United States. Moreover, Title III (the Wiretap Act) further provides that “procedures in this chapter and the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 shall be the exclusive means by which electronic surveillance … may be conducted.”

To be sure, FISA’s prohibition on unauthorized electronic surveillance applies “under circumstances in which a person has a reasonable expectation of privacy and a warrant would be required for law enforcement purposes.” ?1801(f). Surely, U.S. citizens and permanent resident aliens have a reasonable expectation of privacy in their international phone calls and emails. Accordingly, warrants would be required for law enforcement purposes and, therefore, warrantless surveillance absent an authorizing statute would violate the FISA requirement.

I can post it again if you need to me to.

[quote]dermo wrote:
steveo5801 wrote:
dermo wrote:
Explain to me why he could not get a warrant, either before or after. FISA warrants are easy to obtain. If they are not getting one, it is either because they are lazy, or have something to hide.

Here are some conservatives who have issues with the program - are Sam Brownback, George Will, Lindsay Graham, and William Saphire part of the ABB crowd?

Sens. Chuck Hagel (R-NE) and Olympia Snowe (R-ME), both members of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, signed a December 19 letter calling for immediate hearings on Bush’s surveillance program. Along with three of the committee’s Democrats, Hagel and Snowe stated:
We write to express our profound concern about recent revelations that the United States Government may have engaged in domestic electronic surveillance without appropriate legal authority. These allegations, which the President, at least in part, confirmed this weekend require immediate inquiry and action by the Senate.

We respectfully request that the Select Committee on Intelligence and the Committee on the Judiciary, which share jurisdiction and oversight of this issue, jointly undertake an inquiry into the facts and law surrounding these allegations. The overlapping jurisdiction of these two Committees is particularly critical where civil liberties and the rule of law hang in the balance.

A December 22 article in the Lincoln (Nebraska) Journal Star quoted Hagel as saying, “No president is ever above the law. … We are a nation of laws. You cannot avoid or dismiss a law.” The Journal Star added: “At issue, Hagel said, is whether the decision to order such surveillance violates a 1978 law [FISA] requiring approval by a secret U.S. foreign intelligence surveillance court.”

Senate Judiciary Committee chairman Arlen Specter (R-PA) has agreed to hold hearings on Bush surveillance program. As a December 20 New York Times article noted, Specter said he was “skeptical” of Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales’ assertion that “this electronic surveillance is within the law, has been authorized” by Congress. The Times reported:
Mr. Specter, who has said he will hold hearings on the program soon after the confirmation hearings for the Supreme Court nominee, Judge Samuel A. Alito Jr., said he did not believe the president’s decision to inform a handful of members of Congress was sufficient.

‘‘I think it does not constitute a check and balance,’’ he said. ‘‘You can’t have the administration and a select number of members alter the law. It can’t be done.’’

Sen. Richard Lugar (R-IN), on the January 1 edition of CNN’s Late Edition with Wolf Blitzer, also called for congressional hearings on Bush’s surveillance program:
BLITZER: Speaking of intercepts, how comfortable are you with the president’s now publicly acknowledged decision right after 9-11 to authorize secret wiretap surveillance of American citizens, among others, involved in overseas phone calls or e-mails or faxes without getting a formal court order?

LUGAR: Well, I can understand in the context of 9-11 that there may have been, in a common sense way, a reason why calls coming from the Middle East or Afghanistan to America might be intercepted, but I think the Congress quite rightly is trying to take a look at now the fact that we’re past 9-11, we’re going to have to live with the war on terror for a long while. And whether it’s the treatment of prisoners that we’ve been discussing, for example, or elements of the Patriot Act, likewise intercepts are going to have to be given, I think, a pretty good hearing. And what –

BLITZER: So you want hearings? You want hearings?

LUGAR: I do. I think this is an appropriate time, without going back, and should the president ever have tried to listen to a call coming from Afghanistan, probably of course. And in the first few weeks we made many concessions in the Congress because we were at war and we were under attack. We still have the possibility of that going on, so we don’t want to obviate all of this, but I think we want to see what in the course of time really works best, and the FISA act has worked pretty well from the time of President Carter’s day to the current time.

Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME), according to a December 17 Portland (Maine) Press Herald article, “called the allegations of surveillance abuses ‘extremely troubling.’ Collins said the report ‘warrants further inquiry by Congress’ and that she has asked the NSA for a full briefing.”
Sen. John E. Sununu (R-NH) told the Manchester, New Hampshire, Union Leader, “We need to have the appropriate committees of Congress undertake hearings.” According to a December 20 Union Leader article, Sununu questioned the Bush administration’s claim that the warrantless surveillance program was covered by Congress’ post-September 11 authorization of the use of force against terrorist targets:
Sununu said at first glance, he believes “it is a little bit of a stretch” for the administration to say the surveillance program was authorized by the post-Sept. 11 resolution.

That resolution says the President “is authorized to use all necessary and appropriate force against those nations, organizations, or persons he determines planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001, or harbored such organizations or persons, in order to prevent any future acts of international terrorism against the United States by such nations, organizations or persons.”

“I don’t think the ‘use of force’ resolution authorized this use of NSA resources for domestic surveillance,” Sununu said. “This is the kind of activity that should be approved in statute.”

Sen. Larry Craig (R-ID) and Rep. C.L. “Butch” Otter (R-ID) “say they are bothered by the potential privacy abuses with warrantless wiretaps of U.S. citizens’ international communications,” according to a December 24 Associated Press report:
“I’m not in a position to say yes or no, but obviously, the president had by his interpretation the authority,” said Craig. “At the same time, I’m particularly concerned about the long-term effect of the line we may be crossing. When we flipped the FISA over from just foreign governments and known spies and blended it into a gray area of the Patriot Act, we’re now talking about somebody who we have reason to believe is connected to a foreign government, but they are a U.S. citizen.”

[…]

Otter, who represents Idaho’s western half and Panhandle in the 1st District, agreed there are good reasons to monitor telephone calls and e-mail of suspected terrorists. But he said there is a clearly established process of judicial oversight through the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) Court to obtain warrants for such wiretapping. And he is concerned that the White House appears to have circumvented that process.

“The Founders envisioned a nation where people’s privacy was respected and the government’s business was open,” Otter said in a prepared statement in response to questions from The Associated Press. “These actions turn that vision on its head. If the government is willing to bend the rules on this issue, how are we supposed to believe it won’t abuse the powers granted by the Patriot Act?”

Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) said on the December 18 broadcast of CBS’ Face the Nation that “I don’t know of any legal basis to go around” FISA’s requirement the government obtain a warrant to conduct domestic surveillance of Americans:
GRAHAM: If he has the authority to go around the FISA court, which is a court to accommodate the law of the war on terror, the FISA Act was – created a court set up by the chief justice of the United States to allow a rapid response to requests for surveillance activity in the war on terror. I don’t know of any legal basis to go around that. There may be some, but I’m not aware of it. And here’s the concern I have. We can’t become an outcome-based democracy. Even in a time of war, you have to follow the process, because that’s what a democracy is all about: a process.

Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) said on the December 18 broadcast of ABC’s This Week: “Why did the president choose not to use FISA? That’s a legitimate question.”
McCAIN: I know that the leaders of Congress were consulted, and that’s a very important part of this equation. I know that the situation has changed since September 11th. I think that we need to know, and I know these questions will be asked, and the White House will be required to answer why they didn’t go through the normal FISA, as we call it. For the benefit of our viewers that don’t know what FISA is, it’s going to a special court –

GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS (host): You go to a court and get the order.

McCAIN: – yeah, in Washington, D.C., and get the order to – to practice surveillance. We need to have that answer. But I do believe that we all know that since September 11th, we have new challenges with enemies that exist within the United States of America. So the equation has changed. Why did the president choose not to use FISA? That’s a legitimate question.

Former Rep. Bob Barr (R-GA) wrote in an article in the January 9 issue of Time magazine:
Exactly like Nixon before him, Bush has ordered the National Security Agency (NSA) to conduct electronic snooping on communications of various people, including U.S. citizens. That action is unequivocally contrary to the express and implied requirements of federal law that such surveillance of U.S. persons inside the U.S. (regardless of whether their communications are going abroad) must be preceded by a court order. General Michael Hayden, a former director of the NSA and now second in command at the new Directorate of National Intelligence, testified to precisely that point at a congressional hearing in April 2000.

[…]

Alleged associates of al-Qaeda are today’s targets of that breathtaking assertion of presidential power. Tomorrow, it may be your phone calls or e-mails that will be swept up into our electronic infrastructure and secretly kept in a growing file attached to your name. Then everyone you contact could become a suspect, a link in an ever lengthening chain that would ensnare us all in the files of the largest database ever created through unlimited electronic spying that touches every aspect of our lives.

Bruce Fein, who served as deputy attorney general for President Reagan, and Norman J. Ornstein, a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, suggested on the December 19 broadcast of the National Public Radio (NPR)-distributed Diane Rehm Show that Bush’s approval of the warrantless surveillance program may be an impeachable offense:
REHM: And here’s an email from [listener] in Breedsville, Michigan, who, picking up on the earlier conversation and earlier email, says, “So, again, is spying on the American people as impeachable an offense as lying about having sex with an intern?” Bruce.

FEIN: I think the answer requires at least in part considering what the occupant of the presidency says in the aftermath of wrongdoing or rectification. On its face, if President Bush is totally unapologetic and says I continue to maintain that as a wartime president I can do anything I want – I don’t need to consult any other branches – that is an impeachable offense. It’s more dangerous than Clinton’s lying under oath because it jeopardizes our democratic dispensation and civil liberties for the ages. It would set a precedent that, as [former Supreme Court Justice] Robert Jackson said, would lie around like a loaded gun, able to be used indefinitely for any future occupant.

REHM: Norm Ornstein.

ORNSTEIN: Well, I think if we’re going to be intellectually honest here, this really is the kind of thing that Alexander Hamilton was referring to when impeachment was discussed. In an ideal – not quite ideal – but I think the best way to handle this at this point would be for Congress to re-pass FISA. Send it to the president. If he believes in what he believes, let him veto it. They’ll override that veto. Then if he continues to do what he’s been doing, you move to a very different level of confrontation.

In a December 20 Washington Times column, Fein stated:

President Bush presents a clear and present danger to the rule of law. He cannot be trusted to conduct the war against global terrorism with a decent respect for civil liberties and checks against executive abuses. Congress should swiftly enact a code that would require Mr. Bush to obtain legislative consent for every counterterrorism measure that would materially impair individual freedoms.

[…]

The president maintained that, “As a result [of the NSA disclosure], our enemies have learned information they should not have, and the unauthorized disclosure of this effort damages our national security and puts our citizens at risk.” But if secrecy were pivotal to the NSA’s surveillance, why is the president continuing the eavesdropping? And why is he so carefree about risking the liberties of both the living and those yet to be born by flouting the Constitution’s separation of powers and conflating constructive criticism with treason?

In a December 28 Washington Times column, Fein added:

Volumes of war powers nonsense have been assembled to defend Mr. Bush’s defiance of the legislative branch and claim of wartime omnipotence so long as terrorism persists, i.e., in perpetuity. Congress should undertake a national inquest into his conduct and claims to determine whether impeachable usurpations are at hand. As Alexander Hamilton explained in Federalist 65, impeachment lies for “abuse or violation of some public trust,” misbehaviors that “relate chiefly to injuries done immediately to the society itself.”

[…]

Congress should insist the president cease the spying unless or until a proper statute is enacted or face possible impeachment. The Constitution’s separation of powers is too important to be discarded in the name of expediency.

William Safire, a former speechwriter for President Nixon, wrote in his December 30, 2005, New York Times column, which was in the form of a “Beat the Pundit” questionnaire:
The Robertscalito court will: (a) in the Texas case disengage from involvement in states’ redistricting; (b) go the other way in Oregon, holding that federal power to prohibit substances trumps a state’s authority to permit physician-assisted suicide; (c) decide that federal funds can be denied to law schools that prohibit military recruitment on campus; (d) uphold McCain-Feingold, enabling Congress to restrict political contributions but not expenditures; (e) reassert citizens’ Fourth Amendment protection from “security letters” and warrantless surveillance.

In an appearance on the January 1 broadcast of NBC’s Meet the Press, Safire added in reference to Bush’s surveillance program:

SAFIRE: During wartime, we have this excess of security, and afterwards we apologize. And that’s why I offended a lot of my conservative and hard-line friends right after September 11th, when they started putting these captured combatants in jail, and said the president can’t seize dictatorial power. And a lot of my friends looked at me like I was going batty. But now we see this argument over excessive security, and I’m with the critics on that.

Washington Post columnist George F. Will wrote in his December 20 column:
On the assumption that Congress or a court would have been cooperative in September 2001, and that the cooperation could have kept necessary actions clearly lawful without conferring any benefit on the nation’s enemies, the president’s decision to authorize the NSA’s surveillance without the complicity of a court or Congress was a mistake. Perhaps one caused by this administration’s almost metabolic urge to keep Congress unnecessarily distant and hence disgruntled.

Robert A. Levy, a senior fellow in constitutional studies at the libertarian Cato Institute and a Federalist Society member, in a question-and-answer exchange with Federalist Society member David B. Rivkin Jr.:
RIVKIN: Why can’t the President’s use of warrantless surveillance in this instance be justified under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), especially since FISA requires a “reasonable expectation of privacy” to exist before a FISA warrant is required?

LEVY: The text of FISA ?1809 is unambiguous: “A person is guilty of an offense if he intentionally engages in electronic surveillance … except as authorized by statute.” That provision covers communications from or to U.S. citizens or permanent resident aliens in the United States. Moreover, Title III (the Wiretap Act) further provides that “procedures in this chapter and the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 shall be the exclusive means by which electronic surveillance … may be conducted.”

To be sure, FISA’s prohibition on unauthorized electronic surveillance applies “under circumstances in which a person has a reasonable expectation of privacy and a warrant would be required for law enforcement purposes.” ?1801(f). Surely, U.S. citizens and permanent resident aliens have a reasonable expectation of privacy in their international phone calls and emails. Accordingly, warrants would be required for law enforcement purposes and, therefore, warrantless surveillance absent an authorizing statute would violate the FISA requirement.

I know of no court case that has denied there is a reasonable expectation of privacy by U.S. citizens and permanent resident aliens in the types of wire communications that are reportedly monitored by the NSA’s electronic surveillance program. Perhaps there are some international satellite or radio communications that do not come under FISA’s prohibition because the correspondents could not reasonably expect privacy. But the president has made no such showing to Congress, the courts, or the public.

Chicago Tribune columnist Steve Chapman – who in an October 24, 2004, column identified himself as “a small-government, pro-life libertarian” despite his support for then-presidential candidate Sen. John Kerry (D-MA) – wrote in his December 25 column:
The disclosure that the president authorized secret and probably illegal monitoring of communications between people in the United States and people overseas again raises the question: Why?

The government easily could have gotten search warrants to conduct electronic surveillance of anyone with the slightest possible connection to terrorists. The court that handles such requests hardly ever refuses. But Bush bridles at the notion that the president should ever have to ask permission of anyone.

[…]

What we have now is not a robust executive but a reckless one. At times like this, it’s apparent that Cheney and Bush want more power not because they need it to protect the nation, but because they want more power. Another paradox: In their conduct of the war on terror, they expect our trust, but they can’t be bothered to earn it.

At least six newspaper editorial boards that endorsed Bush in 2004 have raised objections to his warrantless domestic surveillance program:

Houston Chronicle, December 17:
You can’t take your eyes off this crowd for a second. No sooner had President Bush, out of no motivation beyond political necessity, capitulated on the McCain anti-torture proviso than the New York Times reported that for more than three years Bush has authorized warrantless domestic eavesdropping. What will crawl out from under the Oval Office rug next? What constitutional mutation will come to light? What new way will be found to diminish distinctions between a free society and the benighted civilization terrorists want to impose?

Chicago Tribune, December 19:
This [wiretapping] may also be a violation of American law, which requires that a special court issue warrants for wiretaps on communications originating in the United States. Some officials familiar with the program said it is illegal. But a Justice Department memo took the radical position that the congressional resolution authorizing the president to act against Al Qaeda enabled him to use methods that were previously forbidden.

On Saturday, President Bush strongly defended the program, saying it has “helped detect and prevent possible terrorist attacks” here and abroad. Had the administration really believed it had congressional consent for spying on Americans at home, it could have asked for legislation to affirm that. It didn’t, for the obvious reason that Congress would not have agreed.

The San Diego Union-Tribune, December 20:
We are inclined to accept the administration’s contention that the warrantless searches have been employed only in a limited number of cases involving persons with links to al-Qaeda. Nevertheless, the real danger here is that there is absolutely no oversight of the NSA’s surveillance program, and therefore absolutely no safeguard against abuses in the future.

Do we really want to trust this administration – and every one that follows it – to engage in secret spying on Americans? Should any government be trusted with absolute power to eavesdrop on its citizens without any checks imposed by law and without any judicial review?

The Denver Post, December 21:
In this time of heightened risk, there is a deep need for spying. But it should be done within the law. Bush himself said in April 2004 that “When we’re talking about chasing down terrorists, we’re talking about getting a court order before we do so.” The White House said the president’s comments applied to roving wiretaps allowed under the Patriot Act, not eavesdropping for foreign intelligence. No wonder the Senate moderates want safeguards.

The Columbus (Ohio) Dispatch, December 22:
Bush was defiant at a Monday news conference, saying the warrantless eavesdropping is legal and necessary to move fast enough to track the movements of people in the United States suspected of having connections to terrorism.

He said the operations curtailed terrorist activity. Federal officials said the process helped capture a Columbus trucker, Iyman Faris, who has pleaded guilty to plotting to destroy the Brooklyn Bridge.

Nevertheless, the president and his agents did not have to break the 1978 law. It contains emergency provisions that let federal agents get court approval up to 72 hours after the surveillance begins. Furthermore, the secret courts rarely have rejected requests for surveillance approval.

The Hartford Courant, December 30:
The White House insists that the president has the legal power to authorize wiretaps without warrants in emergencies. If so, why maintain the surveillance court, whose job it is to review applications for classified wiretaps?

[…]

If the White House believes FISA has become irrelevant in the post-9/11 era, it should persuade Congress to dissolve the court. Acting unilaterally without any feedback or review from a court created for that purpose runs counter to the principle of government accountability.

That’s not what I asked – how easy it might have or might not have been to get a warrant from a court.

My challenge was simply CITE THE LAW THAT REQUIRES THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES TO OBTAIN A WARRANT FROM A COURT FOR SUCH AN ACTION.

Whether or not he COULD have obtained one is irrelevant. If, as you libs would want us to believe, the President did something “illegal” (I would guess that would mean something outside his authority as President of the U.S. and Commander in Cheif of the U.S. military)then surely you can come up with a law that overrides or amends his constitutional authority as President.

Well, where is it???

Um, it is about 2 inches above your post:
The text of FISA ?1809 is unambiguous: “A person is guilty of an offense if he intentionally engages in electronic surveillance … except as authorized by statute.” That provision covers communications from or to U.S. citizens or permanent resident aliens in the United States. Moreover, Title III (the Wiretap Act) further provides that “procedures in this chapter and the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 shall be the exclusive means by which electronic surveillance … may be conducted.”

To be sure, FISA’s prohibition on unauthorized electronic surveillance applies “under circumstances in which a person has a reasonable expectation of privacy and a warrant would be required for law enforcement purposes.” ?1801(f). Surely, U.S. citizens and permanent resident aliens have a reasonable expectation of privacy in their international phone calls and emails. Accordingly, warrants would be required for law enforcement purposes and, therefore, warrantless surveillance absent an authorizing statute would violate the FISA requirement.

I can post it again if you need to me to.

[/quote]

He will probably just keep pretending he never heard it. It’s just easier that way.

[quote]dermo wrote:
[
Again, this has nothing at all to do with liberalism. And of course it has nothing at all to do with the “right to conspire with terrorists over the phone”.

****100 Meters, since you are so smart, does it have anything to do with:

“Slick Willy was having his “slacks adjusted” in the Oval Office by a young bimbo”

Seems no one has a counterpoint for this component of the argument. Obviously any serious debate on the NSA spying issue has to begin, and probably end, with Clinton’s blowjob.[/quote]

Yes, it’s true everything can be traced back to Clinton. Even Rummy tried to blame Clinton for the state of the armed forces right now. Guess he forgot about the whole Iraq thing.

[quote]100meters wrote:
dermo wrote:
[
Again, this has nothing at all to do with liberalism. And of course it has nothing at all to do with the “right to conspire with terrorists over the phone”.

****100 Meters, since you are so smart, does it have anything to do with:

“Slick Willy was having his “slacks adjusted” in the Oval Office by a young bimbo”

Seems no one has a counterpoint for this component of the argument. Obviously any serious debate on the NSA spying issue has to begin, and probably end, with Clinton’s blowjob.

Yes, it’s true everything can be traced back to Clinton. Even Rummy tried to blame Clinton for the state of the armed forces right now. Guess he forgot about the whole Iraq thing.[/quote]

I think that it is fair to say that Clinton’s blowjob contributed to two Wars (in Iraq, and on Christmas), the response to Katrina, and the deficit. Just wait until the Washington Times unearths pictures of Jack Abramoff giving Clinton a blowjob.

In terms of moral decline, one need look no further than Janet Jackson’s nipple.

[quote]100meters wrote:
dermo wrote:
steveo5801 wrote:
dermo wrote:
Explain to me why he could not get a warrant, either before or after. FISA warrants are easy to obtain. If they are not getting one, it is either because they are lazy, or have something to hide.

Here are some conservatives who have issues with the program - are Sam Brownback, George Will, Lindsay Graham, and William Saphire part of the ABB crowd?

Sens. Chuck Hagel (R-NE) and Olympia Snowe (R-ME), both members of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, signed a December 19 letter calling for immediate hearings on Bush’s surveillance program. Along with three of the committee’s Democrats, Hagel and Snowe stated:
We write to express our profound concern about recent revelations that the United States Government may have engaged in domestic electronic surveillance without appropriate legal authority. These allegations, which the President, at least in part, confirmed this weekend require immediate inquiry and action by the Senate.

We respectfully request that the Select Committee on Intelligence and the Committee on the Judiciary, which share jurisdiction and oversight of this issue, jointly undertake an inquiry into the facts and law surrounding these allegations. The overlapping jurisdiction of these two Committees is particularly critical where civil liberties and the rule of law hang in the balance.

A December 22 article in the Lincoln (Nebraska) Journal Star quoted Hagel as saying, “No president is ever above the law. … We are a nation of laws. You cannot avoid or dismiss a law.” The Journal Star added: “At issue, Hagel said, is whether the decision to order such surveillance violates a 1978 law [FISA] requiring approval by a secret U.S. foreign intelligence surveillance court.”

Senate Judiciary Committee chairman Arlen Specter (R-PA) has agreed to hold hearings on Bush surveillance program. As a December 20 New York Times article noted, Specter said he was “skeptical” of Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales’ assertion that “this electronic surveillance is within the law, has been authorized” by Congress. The Times reported:
Mr. Specter, who has said he will hold hearings on the program soon after the confirmation hearings for the Supreme Court nominee, Judge Samuel A. Alito Jr., said he did not believe the president’s decision to inform a handful of members of Congress was sufficient.

‘‘I think it does not constitute a check and balance,’’ he said. ‘‘You can’t have the administration and a select number of members alter the law. It can’t be done.’’

Sen. Richard Lugar (R-IN), on the January 1 edition of CNN’s Late Edition with Wolf Blitzer, also called for congressional hearings on Bush’s surveillance program:
BLITZER: Speaking of intercepts, how comfortable are you with the president’s now publicly acknowledged decision right after 9-11 to authorize secret wiretap surveillance of American citizens, among others, involved in overseas phone calls or e-mails or faxes without getting a formal court order?

LUGAR: Well, I can understand in the context of 9-11 that there may have been, in a common sense way, a reason why calls coming from the Middle East or Afghanistan to America might be intercepted, but I think the Congress quite rightly is trying to take a look at now the fact that we’re past 9-11, we’re going to have to live with the war on terror for a long while. And whether it’s the treatment of prisoners that we’ve been discussing, for example, or elements of the Patriot Act, likewise intercepts are going to have to be given, I think, a pretty good hearing. And what –

BLITZER: So you want hearings? You want hearings?

LUGAR: I do. I think this is an appropriate time, without going back, and should the president ever have tried to listen to a call coming from Afghanistan, probably of course. And in the first few weeks we made many concessions in the Congress because we were at war and we were under attack. We still have the possibility of that going on, so we don’t want to obviate all of this, but I think we want to see what in the course of time really works best, and the FISA act has worked pretty well from the time of President Carter’s day to the current time.

Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME), according to a December 17 Portland (Maine) Press Herald article, “called the allegations of surveillance abuses ‘extremely troubling.’ Collins said the report ‘warrants further inquiry by Congress’ and that she has asked the NSA for a full briefing.”
Sen. John E. Sununu (R-NH) told the Manchester, New Hampshire, Union Leader, “We need to have the appropriate committees of Congress undertake hearings.” According to a December 20 Union Leader article, Sununu questioned the Bush administration’s claim that the warrantless surveillance program was covered by Congress’ post-September 11 authorization of the use of force against terrorist targets:
Sununu said at first glance, he believes “it is a little bit of a stretch” for the administration to say the surveillance program was authorized by the post-Sept. 11 resolution.

That resolution says the President “is authorized to use all necessary and appropriate force against those nations, organizations, or persons he determines planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001, or harbored such organizations or persons, in order to prevent any future acts of international terrorism against the United States by such nations, organizations or persons.”

“I don’t think the ‘use of force’ resolution authorized this use of NSA resources for domestic surveillance,” Sununu said. “This is the kind of activity that should be approved in statute.”

Sen. Larry Craig (R-ID) and Rep. C.L. “Butch” Otter (R-ID) “say they are bothered by the potential privacy abuses with warrantless wiretaps of U.S. citizens’ international communications,” according to a December 24 Associated Press report:
“I’m not in a position to say yes or no, but obviously, the president had by his interpretation the authority,” said Craig. “At the same time, I’m particularly concerned about the long-term effect of the line we may be crossing. When we flipped the FISA over from just foreign governments and known spies and blended it into a gray area of the Patriot Act, we’re now talking about somebody who we have reason to believe is connected to a foreign government, but they are a U.S. citizen.”

[…]

Otter, who represents Idaho’s western half and Panhandle in the 1st District, agreed there are good reasons to monitor telephone calls and e-mail of suspected terrorists. But he said there is a clearly established process of judicial oversight through the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) Court to obtain warrants for such wiretapping. And he is concerned that the White House appears to have circumvented that process.

“The Founders envisioned a nation where people’s privacy was respected and the government’s business was open,” Otter said in a prepared statement in response to questions from The Associated Press. “These actions turn that vision on its head. If the government is willing to bend the rules on this issue, how are we supposed to believe it won’t abuse the powers granted by the Patriot Act?”

Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) said on the December 18 broadcast of CBS’ Face the Nation that “I don’t know of any legal basis to go around” FISA’s requirement the government obtain a warrant to conduct domestic surveillance of Americans:
GRAHAM: If he has the authority to go around the FISA court, which is a court to accommodate the law of the war on terror, the FISA Act was – created a court set up by the chief justice of the United States to allow a rapid response to requests for surveillance activity in the war on terror. I don’t know of any legal basis to go around that. There may be some, but I’m not aware of it. And here’s the concern I have. We can’t become an outcome-based democracy. Even in a time of war, you have to follow the process, because that’s what a democracy is all about: a process.

Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) said on the December 18 broadcast of ABC’s This Week: “Why did the president choose not to use FISA? That’s a legitimate question.”
McCAIN: I know that the leaders of Congress were consulted, and that’s a very important part of this equation. I know that the situation has changed since September 11th. I think that we need to know, and I know these questions will be asked, and the White House will be required to answer why they didn’t go through the normal FISA, as we call it. For the benefit of our viewers that don’t know what FISA is, it’s going to a special court –

GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS (host): You go to a court and get the order.

McCAIN: – yeah, in Washington, D.C., and get the order to – to practice surveillance. We need to have that answer. But I do believe that we all know that since September 11th, we have new challenges with enemies that exist within the United States of America. So the equation has changed. Why did the president choose not to use FISA? That’s a legitimate question.

Former Rep. Bob Barr (R-GA) wrote in an article in the January 9 issue of Time magazine:
Exactly like Nixon before him, Bush has ordered the National Security Agency (NSA) to conduct electronic snooping on communications of various people, including U.S. citizens. That action is unequivocally contrary to the express and implied requirements of federal law that such surveillance of U.S. persons inside the U.S. (regardless of whether their communications are going abroad) must be preceded by a court order. General Michael Hayden, a former director of the NSA and now second in command at the new Directorate of National Intelligence, testified to precisely that point at a congressional hearing in April 2000.

[…]

Alleged associates of al-Qaeda are today’s targets of that breathtaking assertion of presidential power. Tomorrow, it may be your phone calls or e-mails that will be swept up into our electronic infrastructure and secretly kept in a growing file attached to your name. Then everyone you contact could become a suspect, a link in an ever lengthening chain that would ensnare us all in the files of the largest database ever created through unlimited electronic spying that touches every aspect of our lives.

Bruce Fein, who served as deputy attorney general for President Reagan, and Norman J. Ornstein, a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, suggested on the December 19 broadcast of the National Public Radio (NPR)-distributed Diane Rehm Show that Bush’s approval of the warrantless surveillance program may be an impeachable offense:
REHM: And here’s an email from [listener] in Breedsville, Michigan, who, picking up on the earlier conversation and earlier email, says, “So, again, is spying on the American people as impeachable an offense as lying about having sex with an intern?” Bruce.

FEIN: I think the answer requires at least in part considering what the occupant of the presidency says in the aftermath of wrongdoing or rectification. On its face, if President Bush is totally unapologetic and says I continue to maintain that as a wartime president I can do anything I want – I don’t need to consult any other branches – that is an impeachable offense. It’s more dangerous than Clinton’s lying under oath because it jeopardizes our democratic dispensation and civil liberties for the ages. It would set a precedent that, as [former Supreme Court Justice] Robert Jackson said, would lie around like a loaded gun, able to be used indefinitely for any future occupant.

REHM: Norm Ornstein.

ORNSTEIN: Well, I think if we’re going to be intellectually honest here, this really is the kind of thing that Alexander Hamilton was referring to when impeachment was discussed. In an ideal – not quite ideal – but I think the best way to handle this at this point would be for Congress to re-pass FISA. Send it to the president. If he believes in what he believes, let him veto it. They’ll override that veto. Then if he continues to do what he’s been doing, you move to a very different level of confrontation.

In a December 20 Washington Times column, Fein stated:

President Bush presents a clear and present danger to the rule of law. He cannot be trusted to conduct the war against global terrorism with a decent respect for civil liberties and checks against executive abuses. Congress should swiftly enact a code that would require Mr. Bush to obtain legislative consent for every counterterrorism measure that would materially impair individual freedoms.

[…]

The president maintained that, “As a result [of the NSA disclosure], our enemies have learned information they should not have, and the unauthorized disclosure of this effort damages our national security and puts our citizens at risk.” But if secrecy were pivotal to the NSA’s surveillance, why is the president continuing the eavesdropping? And why is he so carefree about risking the liberties of both the living and those yet to be born by flouting the Constitution’s separation of powers and conflating constructive criticism with treason?

In a December 28 Washington Times column, Fein added:

Volumes of war powers nonsense have been assembled to defend Mr. Bush’s defiance of the legislative branch and claim of wartime omnipotence so long as terrorism persists, i.e., in perpetuity. Congress should undertake a national inquest into his conduct and claims to determine whether impeachable usurpations are at hand. As Alexander Hamilton explained in Federalist 65, impeachment lies for “abuse or violation of some public trust,” misbehaviors that “relate chiefly to injuries done immediately to the society itself.”

[…]

Congress should insist the president cease the spying unless or until a proper statute is enacted or face possible impeachment. The Constitution’s separation of powers is too important to be discarded in the name of expediency.

William Safire, a former speechwriter for President Nixon, wrote in his December 30, 2005, New York Times column, which was in the form of a “Beat the Pundit” questionnaire:
The Robertscalito court will: (a) in the Texas case disengage from involvement in states’ redistricting; (b) go the other way in Oregon, holding that federal power to prohibit substances trumps a state’s authority to permit physician-assisted suicide; (c) decide that federal funds can be denied to law schools that prohibit military recruitment on campus; (d) uphold McCain-Feingold, enabling Congress to restrict political contributions but not expenditures; (e) reassert citizens’ Fourth Amendment protection from “security letters” and warrantless surveillance.

In an appearance on the January 1 broadcast of NBC’s Meet the Press, Safire added in reference to Bush’s surveillance program:

SAFIRE: During wartime, we have this excess of security, and afterwards we apologize. And that’s why I offended a lot of my conservative and hard-line friends right after September 11th, when they started putting these captured combatants in jail, and said the president can’t seize dictatorial power. And a lot of my friends looked at me like I was going batty. But now we see this argument over excessive security, and I’m with the critics on that.

Washington Post columnist George F. Will wrote in his December 20 column:
On the assumption that Congress or a court would have been cooperative in September 2001, and that the cooperation could have kept necessary actions clearly lawful without conferring any benefit on the nation’s enemies, the president’s decision to authorize the NSA’s surveillance without the complicity of a court or Congress was a mistake. Perhaps one caused by this administration’s almost metabolic urge to keep Congress unnecessarily distant and hence disgruntled.

Robert A. Levy, a senior fellow in constitutional studies at the libertarian Cato Institute and a Federalist Society member, in a question-and-answer exchange with Federalist Society member David B. Rivkin Jr.:
RIVKIN: Why can’t the President’s use of warrantless surveillance in this instance be justified under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), especially since FISA requires a “reasonable expectation of privacy” to exist before a FISA warrant is required?

LEVY: The text of FISA ?1809 is unambiguous: “A person is guilty of an offense if he intentionally engages in electronic surveillance … except as authorized by statute.” That provision covers communications from or to U.S. citizens or permanent resident aliens in the United States. Moreover, Title III (the Wiretap Act) further provides that “procedures in this chapter and the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 shall be the exclusive means by which electronic surveillance … may be conducted.”

To be sure, FISA’s prohibition on unauthorized electronic surveillance applies “under circumstances in which a person has a reasonable expectation of privacy and a warrant would be required for law enforcement purposes.” ?1801(f). Surely, U.S. citizens and permanent resident aliens have a reasonable expectation of privacy in their international phone calls and emails. Accordingly, warrants would be required for law enforcement purposes and, therefore, warrantless surveillance absent an authorizing statute would violate the FISA requirement.

I know of no court case that has denied there is a reasonable expectation of privacy by U.S. citizens and permanent resident aliens in the types of wire communications that are reportedly monitored by the NSA’s electronic surveillance program. Perhaps there are some international satellite or radio communications that do not come under FISA’s prohibition because the correspondents could not reasonably expect privacy. But the president has made no such showing to Congress, the courts, or the public.

Chicago Tribune columnist Steve Chapman – who in an October 24, 2004, column identified himself as “a small-government, pro-life libertarian” despite his support for then-presidential candidate Sen. John Kerry (D-MA) – wrote in his December 25 column:
The disclosure that the president authorized secret and probably illegal monitoring of communications between people in the United States and people overseas again raises the question: Why?

The government easily could have gotten search warrants to conduct electronic surveillance of anyone with the slightest possible connection to terrorists. The court that handles such requests hardly ever refuses. But Bush bridles at the notion that the president should ever have to ask permission of anyone.

[…]

What we have now is not a robust executive but a reckless one. At times like this, it’s apparent that Cheney and Bush want more power not because they need it to protect the nation, but because they want more power. Another paradox: In their conduct of the war on terror, they expect our trust, but they can’t be bothered to earn it.

At least six newspaper editorial boards that endorsed Bush in 2004 have raised objections to his warrantless domestic surveillance program:

Houston Chronicle, December 17:
You can’t take your eyes off this crowd for a second. No sooner had President Bush, out of no motivation beyond political necessity, capitulated on the McCain anti-torture proviso than the New York Times reported that for more than three years Bush has authorized warrantless domestic eavesdropping. What will crawl out from under the Oval Office rug next? What constitutional mutation will come to light? What new way will be found to diminish distinctions between a free society and the benighted civilization terrorists want to impose?

Chicago Tribune, December 19:
This [wiretapping] may also be a violation of American law, which requires that a special court issue warrants for wiretaps on communications originating in the United States. Some officials familiar with the program said it is illegal. But a Justice Department memo took the radical position that the congressional resolution authorizing the president to act against Al Qaeda enabled him to use methods that were previously forbidden.

On Saturday, President Bush strongly defended the program, saying it has “helped detect and prevent possible terrorist attacks” here and abroad. Had the administration really believed it had congressional consent for spying on Americans at home, it could have asked for legislation to affirm that. It didn’t, for the obvious reason that Congress would not have agreed.

The San Diego Union-Tribune, December 20:
We are inclined to accept the administration’s contention that the warrantless searches have been employed only in a limited number of cases involving persons with links to al-Qaeda. Nevertheless, the real danger here is that there is absolutely no oversight of the NSA’s surveillance program, and therefore absolutely no safeguard against abuses in the future.

Do we really want to trust this administration – and every one that follows it – to engage in secret spying on Americans? Should any government be trusted with absolute power to eavesdrop on its citizens without any checks imposed by law and without any judicial review?

The Denver Post, December 21:
In this time of heightened risk, there is a deep need for spying. But it should be done within the law. Bush himself said in April 2004 that “When we’re talking about chasing down terrorists, we’re talking about getting a court order before we do so.” The White House said the president’s comments applied to roving wiretaps allowed under the Patriot Act, not eavesdropping for foreign intelligence. No wonder the Senate moderates want safeguards.

The Columbus (Ohio) Dispatch, December 22:
Bush was defiant at a Monday news conference, saying the warrantless eavesdropping is legal and necessary to move fast enough to track the movements of people in the United States suspected of having connections to terrorism.

He said the operations curtailed terrorist activity. Federal officials said the process helped capture a Columbus trucker, Iyman Faris, who has pleaded guilty to plotting to destroy the Brooklyn Bridge.

Nevertheless, the president and his agents did not have to break the 1978 law. It contains emergency provisions that let federal agents get court approval up to 72 hours after the surveillance begins. Furthermore, the secret courts rarely have rejected requests for surveillance approval.

The Hartford Courant, December 30:
The White House insists that the president has the legal power to authorize wiretaps without warrants in emergencies. If so, why maintain the surveillance court, whose job it is to review applications for classified wiretaps?

[…]

If the White House believes FISA has become irrelevant in the post-9/11 era, it should persuade Congress to dissolve the court. Acting unilaterally without any feedback or review from a court created for that purpose runs counter to the principle of government accountability.

That’s not what I asked – how easy it might have or might not have been to get a warrant from a court.

My challenge was simply CITE THE LAW THAT REQUIRES THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES TO OBTAIN A WARRANT FROM A COURT FOR SUCH AN ACTION.

Whether or not he COULD have obtained one is irrelevant. If, as you libs would want us to believe, the President did something “illegal” (I would guess that would mean something outside his authority as President of the U.S. and Commander in Cheif of the U.S. military)then surely you can come up with a law that overrides or amends his constitutional authority as President.

Well, where is it???

Um, it is about 2 inches above your post:
The text of FISA ?1809 is unambiguous: “A person is guilty of an offense if he intentionally engages in electronic surveillance … except as authorized by statute.” That provision covers communications from or to U.S. citizens or permanent resident aliens in the United States. Moreover, Title III (the Wiretap Act) further provides that “procedures in this chapter and the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 shall be the exclusive means by which electronic surveillance … may be conducted.”

To be sure, FISA’s prohibition on unauthorized electronic surveillance applies “under circumstances in which a person has a reasonable expectation of privacy and a warrant would be required for law enforcement purposes.” ?1801(f). Surely, U.S. citizens and permanent resident aliens have a reasonable expectation of privacy in their international phone calls and emails. Accordingly, warrants would be required for law enforcement purposes and, therefore, warrantless surveillance absent an authorizing statute would violate the FISA requirement.

I can post it again if you need to me to.

He will probably just keep pretending he never heard it. It’s just easier that way.[/quote]

Heard it loud and clear.

My reply: So what?

In a time of WAR the President has powers to protect the U.S. from all enemies foreign and domestic. This will survive all of you “Bush Haters” attempts to make hay about this as well as any Supreme Court review of the matter.

As far as Slick Willy, my reference to his whatever in the Oval Office was meant to highlight the fact that your hero, President William Jefferson Clinton, WAS OUT TO LUNCH WHEN IT CAME TO OSAMA AND THE THREAT TO OUR NATION HE POSED.

Whine on you libs and keep whinning. You will lose even more elections down the road this way…