View Full Version : Bush declines comment on spying report
danny android
17th December 2005, 00:27
MSNBC Report. (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/10488458)
So their spying on us..... Big suprise.
Atlas Swallowed
17th December 2005, 00:31
Since thier inception they have been spying on us. Screw them.
Guerrilla22
17th December 2005, 01:19
Of course the government has been spying on us and the dept. of defense no less.
WUOrevolt
18th December 2005, 00:47
He has now admitted to it.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4538286.stm
DisIllusion
18th December 2005, 03:18
"It's to protect the American people!"
That's what Hitler said, except for the Aryan people.
danny android
18th December 2005, 03:26
Well atleast now this crap is exposed to the American people. Hopefully now somebody will put a stop to it.
Guerrilla22
18th December 2005, 06:56
key provisions of the patriot act were blocked yesterday from being renewed.
group of senators -- most of them Democrats joined by a few Republicans -- on Friday blocked renewal of the provisions as they demanded more safeguards for civil liberties. Bush said the roadblock was irresponsible and could endanger lives.
Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, a Tennessee Republican, said, "We're working all angles" to extend expiring provisions, and voiced optimism that they would succeed.
Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid, a Nevada Democrat, again urged a three-month extension of the provisions to allow time to resolve the differences. Congressional Republican leaders and the White House have so far rejected such a move.
But one congressional leadership aide put it, "No one one wants to see this expire," so a temporary extension was a looming possibility.
The New York Times said the presidential order allowed the National Security Agency to track international telephone calls and e-mails of hundreds of people without the court approval normally required for domestic spying.
Bush said the disclosure was improper. "Revealing classified information is illegal, alerts our enemies, and endangers our country," he said.
He insisted his role as commander-in-chief gave him the authority to allow the surveillance. He said the program was constitutional, was reviewed by legal authorities and that leaders in Congress were aware of it.
Democratic Sen. Russ Feingold (news, bio, voting record) of Wisconsin said he was shocked by the program and disagreed with Bush on its legality.
"The president believes that he has the power to override the laws that Congress has passed. This is not how our democratic system of government works," Feingold said. "He is a president, not a king."
danny android
18th December 2005, 07:46
I think it is crazy that Bush is saying that it is dangerous to NOT have the patriot act. He has also said that because of the reports in the media on the spying that "our enemies now know things they should not have." Flipping rediculous. He should have said "now the American people no something we didn't want them to."
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