Predictable & Infuriating

Today the New York Times reports that since the FISA Reauthorization Act passed last summer, giving the Bush administration after-the-fact authorization for its warrantless wiretapping program, the NSA has nonetheless continued to violate Americans’ civil liberties and conduct unauthorized surveillance of our phones and emails. Risen and Lichtblau use seriously alarming phrases to describe the violation of rights, saying that they were “significant and systemic” and that surveillance “went beyond the broad legal limits.”

The invasion of civil liberties is a malignant behavior. Everything we had seen prior to last year’s FISA legislation suggested that when the executive branch has given license to violate Americans’ liberties, that license is used. The increase in power, along with a decrease in oversight, was certain to lead to other abuses. And now it has.

Glenn Greenwald makes this point clearly:

These widespread eavesdropping abuses enabled by the 2008 FISA bill — a bill passed with the support of Barack Obama along with the entire top Democratic leadership in the House, including Nancy Pelosi and Steny Hoyer, and substantial numbers of Democratic Senators — aren’t a bug in that bill, but rather, were one of the central features of it.  Everyone knew that the FISA bill which Congressional Democrats passed — and which George Bush and Dick Cheney celebrated — would enable these surveillance abuses.  That was the purpose of the law:  to gut the safeguards in place since the 1978 passage of FISA, destroy the crux of the oversight regime over executive surveillance of Americans, and enable and empower unchecked government spying activities.  This was not an unintended and unforeseeable consequence of that bill.  To the contrary, it was crystal clear that by gutting FISA’s safeguards, the Democratic Congress was making these abuses inevitable.

But that these abuses were predictable is not the point. We are still, after all, talking about the behavior of the United States government towards the citizens of the United States. This is no trifling thing. It wasn’t in December of 2005 when Risen and Lichtblau first reported on the Bush administration’s warrantless wiretapping program. It was not a small thing when Chris Dodd’s efforts stalled retroactive immunity and a bad FISA bill for nearly nine months from October 2007 to July 2008. And it isn’t a small thing now. This is a fundamental question of the rule of law and the protection our Constitution and our laws afford citizens from abuses of power.

Digby writes, “The safeguards were so confusing they caused them to “inadvertently” do even more unconstitutional spying than before. Awesome.” Yes, the bad FISA bill that was passed last summer augured this behavior by removing most of the minuscule check on intelligence gathering powers within the US and of American citizens. But that the NSA found a way to violate even the remnants of FISA limitations is appalling. There must be recourse and it has to go beyond the administration’s assurances to the Times that the NSA’s actions have been stopped and corrected.

One of the only things that gives me the slightest hope that something will actually done, publicly and through legislation, by Congress is that the NSA actually illegally wiretapped a sitting US Congressman. Even feckless members of Congress should be able to be righteously indignant at the violations of civil liberties of one of their colleagues.

The NSA’s behavior is unacceptable. It’s infuriating. And it shouldn’t be accepted by anyone today any more than we accepted the Bush administration’s illegal warrantless wiretapping program.

Havel & Tutu Call on China to Stop Execution of Tibetans

Nobel Peace Prize winners Václav Havel and Archbishop Desmond Tutu have joined Prince Hassan Bin Talal, Vartan Gregorian and Yohei Sasakawa to pen an op-ed in The Guardian calling on the Chinese government to stop their planned execution of two Tibetans who protested for Tibetan independence last spring. Along with Lobsang Gyaltsen and Loyak, two other Tibetans were sentenced were also sentenced to death with sentences immediately suspended, and a third receiving life in prison. The piece focuses on the fact that these five Tibetans could not have received a fair trial, which was done in secret, and China’s legal treatment of Tibetans must be open and transparent. The op-ed closes with this powerful line:

Only by allowing an international presence to report, dispassionately and truthfully, on what is happening in Tibet, will China’s government dispel the idea that its continued rule there means that even more severe human rights abuses will be inflicted on members of China’s ethnic minorities.

I don’t expect the Chinese government to respond favorably to this request.

Time Off

I can sympathize with Josh – taking time off from full-time blogging is hard. Doing work as an online political operative means being connected all the time. There are multiple email accounts I read religiously (I read all my emails, including from list serves, to the best of my ability. It’s something of a neurosis.). I maintain multiple blogs. This past week when I was in Puerto Rico, I was able to really unplug for the first time in about four years. I shut off my email list traffic, I didn’t blog, I didn’t obsess over work emails. And it felt great.

I’m getting back up to speed today, but it’s good to know that I can unplug when I really, really try.

Funny

John Rogers, on real patriotism and rightwing faux populist outrage.

Quick reminder: today, all across America, thousands of people whose taxes will go down are marching and protesting the fact that my taxes will go up.

By 3 percentage points.

Memo to protesters: I’m okay with that, because I am not a selfish dick. I think I can survive the same crushing tax rates we had during the great economic apocalypse of the Clinton Years.

Proud to Pay My Taxes

AsshatteryCat
There’s some serious asshattery afoot today, as right wing bloggers and crackpots take to the streets to hold “Tea Parties” to protest paying taxes. Of course, only in the world of selfish, self-indulgent Republicans can paying taxes be considered something to protest during a time of economic crisis and two wars. Apparently Republicans simply and proudly choose to not support our troops, not support our emergency responders, not support our schools, our infrastructure, and our senior citizens.

Sarah Burris of Future Majority put together a great pushback to the anti-tax teabaggers.  She suggest raiding the rightwing’s #teaparty hash tag on Twitter to remind these fools why we pay taxes.

In the video above, many young people express why taxes are meaningful to them, or why they pay even if they don’t believe in what its going to.

For me it was a first – I had to pay. Not because I made a lot of money, but because I am self-employed. While I have to say it hurts, I know I’m paying for my country. I’m paying for students who can’t afford to go to college so they might have a chance, I’m paying for free lunches, I’m paying for my dad’s salary, for the health care of the 9-11 Firefighters who breathed the toxic air on that awful day. I’m proud to pay taxes because its the right thing to do.

If you’re on Twitter, Facebook, Myspace, or any other social network – think about updating your status telling others what you pay for. And tag it with #teaparty.

I chimed in with these tweets so far:

I pay taxes to support our troops #teaparty #teabagging #tcot

I pay taxes because I love my country and my fellow citizens #teaparty #teabagging #tcot

Please join in and help us make sure that no one forgets how important paying our taxes to the survival of the United States and the preservation of the American way of life.

Vacation

I’m on vacation in Puerto Rico for the next five days and probably won’t be posting much due to a lack of good internet connection and a desire to, you know, be on vacation. Regularly scheduled program should resume by next Wednesday…

Republican Obstructionism

Christy’s right, now is not the time for Republican obstructionism over key executive branch legal appointments. The Republican Party’s opposition to Harold Koh and Dawn Johnsen are a fine balance between pro-forma culture war flash backs and the latest manifestation of opposition to constitutional checks and balances and the rule of law. In either event, it’s political obstructionism at best and the reanimation of zombie Bush/Cheney-ism at its worst.

Koh and Johnsen should be confirmed swiftly. Republicans who obstruct should be lambasted in the public, by the public, by the press, and by Democrats.

Shorter Dodd Challengers

Shorter Rob Simmons & Sam Caligiuri:

It’s disgraceful that Chris Dodd took money years ago from employees of companies now receiving federal bailout money. And since all of you AIG employees now have extra money in your pocket thanks to that returned Dodd check, you can make your donations out to our campaigns via check, money order, or credit card.

In all seriousness, this is what Simmons actually said:

“I don’t feel that I have any constraints on me,” Simmons said.

That’s for sure. During his career in Congress, Simmons has accepted more than $1 million from PACs and individuals associated with finance, insurance and real estate.

I tried again with Simmons. Does all this talk about Dodd being a lying weasel mean that you will reject the kind of contributions that the senator’s critics are slamming him for?

“I’m a private citizen right now. I’m not a member of the Senate. I’m not the chair of the powerful banking committee, which oversees this disaster to the economy,” Simmons said.

“I will make that judgment when the time arrives.”

And Caligiuri isn’t even sharp enough to realize the grenades he’s throwing at Dodd might bounce back his way:

 “I haven’t thought about that,” Caligiuri responded when I asked whether he planned on refusing any money from anyone.

Dodd is going to have to run a real race this cycle. But as long as he’s up against buffoons like these, I like his odds.

On Triple Counting

It seems judgmental DC reporters are making a lot of the fact that Organizing for America’s 642,000 delivered signatures to Congress is based on triple counting each signatory and sending a copy to both members of the Senate and the Representative for that person’s home district.

Guys, this is not triple counting. For a citizen to lobby the delegation that represents him or her, that person must contact three offices. If they only contacted one, two offices would not have been reached.  This is how the legislative branch is structured in the US government. To put it a different way, lobbying Congress is not like lobbying the White House; citizens can’t just send one email or fax to have achieved what they’re trying to do. OFA is enabling citizens to successfully lobby all the people who represent them. It’s not a number dodge, it’s how the system works.

NYT on Dodd Credit Card Legislation

The New York Times editorial board gives Chris Dodd’s credit card legislation very high marks and urges the Senate to pass it swiftly and without reduction in its regulatory powers. Dodd blogged about the Credit Card Accountability Responsibility and Disclosure Act (Credit CARD Act) at Huffington Post recently. Dodd also did a live video chat at My Left Nutmeg, Connecticut’s main progressive community blog.

The Credit CARD Act will apply far greater restrictions to how banks treat their credit card customers, both while they are clients and when they are being recruited to be card holders. Additionally the Act gives customers far greater protections against usurious rates and unfair policies that aim to punish people for minor mistakes and small outstanding balances from larger initial debts.

The Senate Republican caucus is going to fight tooth and nail against any legislation that makes life harder for the credit card industry. But it’s critical that Dodd and the Democrats stand up for this good piece of legislation and not let conservatives water it down in the slightest. In these tough economic times, we can’t let working Americans be taken advantage of by unscrupulous credit card companies. For a man who is reviled by his opponents on the right for being a friend of the banking industry, it’s deeply satisfying to see Dodd do what he’s always done – stand alongside working Americans and protecting their interests from predatory banks and lenders. The great irony is that while the Rob Simmons, Kevin Rennie, Sean Hannity and the NRSC unfairly attack Dodd for being a friend of the banks, they and their Republican buddies in the Senate be fighting to protect the interests of their friends and campaign contributors in the credit card industry against Dodd’s progressive legislation. And, of course, they will do this with a straight face.