WE Suck Worse

"silent majority" is an oxymoron

By haystack Posted in Comments (162) / Email this page » / Leave a comment »

I am sick and tired of this laughingly-termed "Conservative Movement". We all suck at it, it's as much a movement as the one those who take Ex-Lax might experience, and it needs to change or go away so we can continue to shrivel and hide in our dark little closets away from the bright sunshine that IS the Progressive/Liberal activist movement slow-bleeding our country into shame, decay, and degradation.

Myself, and you people reading this right now, are ALL deserving of shame and self-deprecation. And you need to join me in getting our collective heads out of our collective "(expletive removed in deference to the posting guidelines) es."

More below the fold...

When the House of Representatives bought each other with HR 1591, by a slim margin, there were 2 Republicans that decided to vote with the Democrats. I called them what they were-traitors.

We had what I consider to be the longest, most thought out, and best considered discussion about traitor Republicans that I have seen at Redstate in quite some time.

Right on the heels of that vote, comes the Senate's equivalent joke of a bill. Today, a vote on an amendment:

To strike language that would tie the hands of the Commander-in-Chief by imposing an arbitrary timetable for the withdrawal of U.S. forces from Iraq, thereby undermining the position of American Armed Forces and jeopardizing the successful conclusion of Operation Iraqi Freedom.

has passed.

Obviously, we are either lying, or our attempts to tell our Senators and Congressmen that we want them to vote AGAINST Pork and defeat are not working. So much for the lap of luxury enjoyed by being the silent (expletive removed in deference to the posting guidelines) majority.

When you have that pig loser Chuck Hagel, (yeah-the one that thinks you want him to be your President?) and that (expletive removed in deference to the posting guidelines) Gordon Smith from Oregon BOTH voting against an amendment such as this, what do you have exactly?

You have EITHER a country about to go against her Soldiers and her Military in exchange for pork barrel earmarks to keep the pockets lined for the faithful traitors, OR you have a country who is no longer governed by those who do so at the pleasure of the governed.

Which is it?

A full fledged revolt is getting very close. Which side will you be on? Complacent "go with the flow" or, "had enough-not going to take it anymore?"

I am considering a trip to Boston Harbor and a chartered cruise...anyone interested?

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I said it before right after the election, "it is time we started cleaning house and purged the rhino's who more aptly belong on the Democrat side of the isle.

That is what primaries are for, and we need to use them aggressively.

I'll repeat myself from a previous post to accentuate the point. I am tired of rolling over and taking it myself.

Wubbies World - The odds of hitting your target go up dramatically when you actually aim for it!

Right on about the RINO's by jeffreywturner

I can understand Gordon Smith's vote. He has to run for re-election in Oregon next year.

There is no excuse however for Hagel to vote against this common sense amendment. I am 100% sure that we can get a real Republican elected from Nebraska. As a matter of fact, even the Democrat Senator from Nebraska is better than a lot of RINOs.

The same goes for those 2 traitors in the House. They both come from reliably conservative districts that will elect any credible Republican. We should OUST those jerks.

"Life is too short, can't we all just eat pork and kill some terrorists?"

Just to add: by jeffreywturner

FYI: Hagel's vote here MADE the difference. If he switched, it would have been a tie vote that Cheney would surely break in favor of the Patriots.

"Life is too short, can't we all just eat pork and kill some terrorists?"

I can understand the rationality of not throwing out Gordon Smith in the Oregon primary, where the likely result in a blue state general election would be having Smith replaced by a Democrat. But in a red state like Nebraska, the Republican primary voters should certainly find somebody who could both beat Hagel and go on to victory in the general election.

I'll quibble about the word RINO in Hagel's case. I think he does vote with the Republicans on a most issues, but that doesn't count for much weighed against trying to surrender to America's enemies in the middle of the war. People like Collins or Specter may have lower percentages than Hagel for voting on the same side as most Republicans, but at least they don't sell out our soldiers to indulge their vanity like Hagel.

At heart Hagel is as much of a media whore as McCain, but Hagel is just too dumb to be as good at it as McCain. And even for McCain, signing on to this sellout with Hagel wasn't worth the media adoration it would get him.

You say you understand Gordon Smith voting Yea because he's running for re-election; but does that mean you do not understand Norm Coleman from Minnesota (also running for re-election) because he voted Nay?

Your understanding of Gordon implies that there is something about being incumbent that makes it predictable for a Republican to side with the Democrats in this issue, but this was not the case since most incumbents running for Re-election voted contrary to Gordon Smith, by far.

Please clarify.

and they burn soldiers in effigy. I can understand Gordon Smith not being in a good spot with his vote either way (I live in OR).
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The CIA has better politicians than it has spies - Fred Thompson

No way to defend by Cowboy

a vote this critical just to keep your seat. He will lose it anyway. Hopefully in the primary. But certainly in the general.

This post is odd. by LPFabulous

It seems to me that there are two rather obvious ways to respond to this:

1. Clearly, conservatives are not any kind of majority, silent or otherwise. I'm pretty sure polling bears this out.

2. You can't just redefine "pleasure of the governed" to mean whatever you want. Smith's vote is almost certainly in line with the majority opinion of the state of Oregon. Continuing to call people who oppose the war traitors isn't exactly helpful, rational, or even correct.

Actually.... by youngling

calling those who oppose giving troops the support required to complete their mission - a mission authorized by those very same people not so long ago - traitors is rational and correct, although helpful is open for debate.

On your other point - whether conservatives are the majority or not - you must remember that there has not been any strong elected conservative leadership in this country for approximately 18 years now. Thus people have not had conservative principles to vote on or support in the elections and have reverted to silence by not voting. Look at the reelection of Reagan, the last true conservative elected president. It was by all definitions a landslide with Reagan carrying 49 states. That was when the "silent" majority came out to the polls and showed their numbers...

"I don't believe in a government that protects us from ourselves."
Ronald Reagan

"Politics is supposed to be the second oldest profession. I have come to realize that it bears a very close resemblance to the first."
Ronald Reagan

How can you be sure by LPFabulous

you aren't just reversing causality here? That there hasn't been a strong conservative government in 18 years could mean Americans haven't been offered one - or it could mean they don't want one.

As for the troops, I don't have a hard position to take here. I don't buy the line that Congress either has to fund the troops or surrender. If I were there, I wouldn't be giving up on Iraq just yet, but I honestly can't find a lot of fault with the folks there who disagree with me (and you, and Redstate). They're assessing the information they have and the stated opinions of their constituents. If we take seriously the idea that Congress serves the American people, I think we should have a much harder time getting angry with Congress when it tries to do what the American people elected it to do (assuming, I think reasonably, that the current Congress was elected largely because of its opposition to staying the course).

Rather than guess ? You might be surprised by what you find.
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"Those who expect to reap the blessings of freedom must, like men, undergo the fatigue of supporting it."
-Thomas Paine: The American Crisis, No. 4, 1777

Okay. by LPFabulous

I spent 3.5 seconds searching Google and here's what I turned up:

http://www.outsidethebeltway.com/archives/2007/03/twice_as_many_american...

41% identify as conservatives. 41 < 50. QED.

Also, as the piece I've linked points out, Americans may use the word "conservative" but actually want some fairly liberal policies. For instance, they seem to support national health care something like 2-1, they support some amount of legal abortion, and so on. A broad nationwide opposition to same sex marriage does not a silent conservative majority make.

41 % conservative
21% liberal
34% Moderate

Of course when you toss this in
"This, from a survey sample where 47% are Democrats or Democrat leaners vice 43% Republicans or Republican leaners"

You get a country that seems majority conservative. Go figure
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"Those who expect to reap the blessings of freedom must, like men, undergo the fatigue of supporting it."
-Thomas Paine: The American Crisis, No. 4, 1777

To be fair by mbecker908

and remember, we're in MoeLane41's "Kinder, Gentler Red State", conservatives are a plurality. By a larger margin than Bill Clinton won either time...
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Those who live by the sword get shot by those who don't.

...but you can lay off any time now.

The Fuzzy Puppy of the VRWC.

It may get me to bust a gasket.

Especially the chickenhawkers. Its like drowning and being chained to suicidal children.
______________________________
"Those who expect to reap the blessings of freedom must, like men, undergo the fatigue of supporting it."
-Thomas Paine: The American Crisis, No. 4, 1777

Relax, joliphant by Leon H Wolf

Chickenhawking is still a per se bannable offense.

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[F]or by the fundamental law of Nature, man being to be preserved as much as possible, when all cannot be preserved, the safety of the innocent is to be preferred...

-John Locke

I agree. by LPFabulous

Or, rather, I see no reason to disagree. I think the picture is obviously muddied by inexactness of definition and (well-deserved?) demonization of the term liberal. All that said, I am not surprised by the fact that a larger portion of the electorate considers itself conservative than anything else, but that silent plurality is certainly not uniform. A large majority of Americans (presumably some conservatives are included) favor national health care and are skeptical of continuing the war in Iraq. Whether they are wrong about those things is a completely separate issue from whether Congressmen are traitors for voting in tandem with those opinions.

And, just to be clear, I don't discount the fact that Congresscritters should have spines and be willing to buck their constituents when those constituents are wrong (which, lord knows, they are a LOT). But this issue is much deeper than "Gordon Smith is a traitor."

Wrong side of the fence. by iamthewalrus

6 in 10 Americans support this bill. 3:1 support congressional subpoenas.

Sorry guys, the public has woken up and is rejecting Republican rule.

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Those who live by the sword get shot by those who don't.

We're experimenting with a Kinder, Gentler RedState model again. 'Egregious' is to be my new watchword; mere dumba**ery ain't going to cut it.

The Fuzzy Puppy of the VRWC.

MoeLane41...
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Those who live by the sword get shot by those who don't.

The Fuzzy Puppy of the VRWC.

"mere dumba**ery ain't going to cut it."

I appreciate it.... :)

Kook. Kook. Kachoo. -nt by BooBooKitty

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Thou art the Great Cat, the avenger of the Gods, and the judge of words...-Inscription on the Royal Tombs at Thebes

"Polling" is only as good as the way the the question is asked.

If you ask people wether they support same sex marriage, they overwhelmingly oppose it.

If you ask people wether they are in favor of destroying the terrorists in Iraq or surrendering to them, they overwhelmingly support victory.

The only reason "polls" show favor for such rediculous bills is because people are not told what they really mean and what their implications are.

"Life is too short, can't we all just eat pork and kill some terrorists?"

Interesting methodology by Amelioration

If you ask people wether they are in favor of destroying the terrorists in Iraq or surrendering to them, they overwhelmingly support victory.

If that's your idea of how to properly ask an unbiased question, it's no surprise you're disheartened by typical polling results.

if you think that question isn't the actual pair of options on the table.

Language by Amelioration

It's about language not options. Whether I believe personally that the grey area in the Iraq War is a null set isn't relevant.

Wait a second; by seattle-ite

Are you seriously suggesting that the fate of our troops in Harm's Way should be boiled down to whomever uses the most popular SEMANTICS????? And, you call conservatives deluded; Geez.

Are you quoting a poll? by prometheus77

If you ask people wether they are in favor of destroying the terrorists in Iraq or surrendering to them, they overwhelmingly support victory.

Was the wording of a question in a poll exactly as you just wrote it?

At least according to Pew Research Center, it's 59% to 33%:

http://pewresearch.org/pubs/437/solid-majority-favors-congressional-troo...

So I'm not sure Congress is betraying a silent majority by giving them what they want.

And I'm not sure that wanting deadlines for a pullout can be described as traitorous, anti-American, or defeatist when most Americans (who are not traitors, anti-American, or defeatist by nature) want them.

Thats because most of this nation is being fed lies and pro
Al Qeada/antiAmerica garbage from its own media.

Most Americans have no clue what is going on in Iraq, who is behind it or what the consequences are if we pull out.

The media refuses to investigate any of those answers because they know it would turn the sentiment toward defeating terrorist and all around bad guys.. but worse, it would mean that Bush was right.

My sense is that Democrats are trying to neutralize the one policy flaw which they have been stuck with for decades - that they are weak on national security.

The media is giving them more cover fire than in any time in history.

Truth is if this continues we really will be going through and honest to God Stalinistic state where opposition wont just be shouted down, but will be supressed through government legislation. See "fairness" doctrine.

Kinder and gentler by hunter

only means the Kos Koolaid Kids spew their hateful bilge in large volume.

OTOH, we have some large cacti near & I have rope.
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Those who live by the sword get shot by those who don't.

We do not suck by jeffreywturner

Look,

Just because the Yankees don't win the World Series EVERY YEAR, doesn't mean they SUCK. They have still won about 1/3 of all the champoinships of the 8 decades which still makes for an incredible franchise.

In much the same way, just because the Democrats take a slim majority for ONE CONGRESSIONAL TERM out of the last SEVEN, when they had every conceivable break and advantage doesn't mean Conservatives suck. It just means we lost one. C'mon, you can't win em all. We are still pretty damn good and it won't be long before we get to shellack those losers and put them back in minority status again. We just have to shed some dead weight. (Hagel/Snowe/Collins, etc.)

"Life is too short, can't we all just eat pork and kill some terrorists?"

Very, very bad example. by mbecker908

Even when the Yankees lose (as they did in 2001 to our DBacks, thanks Louis!) they still have some things going for them.

1. They are a Team.
2. They have one guy accountable for victory.
3. They don't tolerate mavericks who think they know how to manage.
4. They have one goal all season long - WIN.
5. Every player understands the goal and is committed to it.
6. If a player doesn't play up to expectations he is replaced.

A smarmy, mealy-mouthed pretender like Hagel would last not one out of his first inning with the Yankees. McCain would be playing Class D. For a week.
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Those who live by the sword get shot by those who don't.

current Republican Party don't operate that way, perhaps because they can't.

Jeffrey wrote: "We just have to shed some dead weight. (Hagel/Snowe/Collins, etc.)" This meets your point 6: "If a player doesn't play up to expectations he is replaced." And there, you both might have the same problem with the GOP. You recall all too well Liddy Dole's recent dalliance with the departed Linc Chafee. You see, the party apparatus isn't built for electoral retribution, but some legislative discipline would be nice. (That being said, keeping the Maine girls was something of a feat.)

Now, chances are that these votes were cases of political posturing, as we all "know" that the President will veto this language. Why didn't McConnell and Lott stop this nonsense in the Senate? Perhaps like the House leadership, they want the Democrats on record as having supported this "fatally flawed" nonsense.

Shucks, I don't even have a problem with that. My problem - in general, not specifically with this issue - is that #1 through #5 are not seemingly doable either.

Specifically, I'm tickled Chafee is gone. His liberal Democrat replacement won't vote against the "Republican agenda" any less frequently than Linc did. I have no problem living with the girls from Maine or even Specter, although in the case of Specter it would have been nice for somebody to lay out the ground rules a little more specifically relating to moving nominees out of the Judiciary Committee to the floor.

Hagel and Smith, especially Hagel, should be dropped into life's political shredder. There is no fate too bad for them.
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Those who live by the sword get shot by those who don't.

There is going to be so much coming down the pike to fight and vote against it won't be funny. I suppose that since the President is obviously going to veto it, they figured they'd try to stop the bleeding somewhere else.

I knew that if/when the Dems got into power it would be a nightmare. Too bad I was right.

Seems like we're all kind of waiting for them to pull out of it. The "old pro's" like McConnell and Lott are doing their best but the Dems have a way of smearing and placing at an impasse anyone who is effective.

So, keep your eye on Lott and McConnell. And pray the nightmare ends soon.

Who wasn't there? by leonidas

I understand why the incapacitated man (is he called Johnson?) wouldn't have been in the Senate to vote on this bill, but which other Senator was missing?

I cannot for ten seconds understand this Congress.

Enzi (R-WY) -nt- by CA Pol Junkie

Incapacitated Senators are traditionally given the courtesy of having someone from the other side of an issue sit out a vote.

The Fuzzy Puppy of the VRWC.

Nelson was the deciding vote that got the Dems to 50. With one guy out, there couldn't be a tie for the VP to break if the Repubs had one vote or 49 votes.

and I vote we all take a nap

That's what Pres. Coolidge would have done

"During my lifetime, all our problems have come from mainland Europe, and all the solutions from the English-speaking nations across the world." - Thatcher

First of all it is the by rqballjohn

First of all it is the liberals who are the whinny ones in the world. They are the vocal ones if they do not get their way, that is why it seems that there are a lot of them. They are the ones that march, sit in, have demonstrations, and generally make life annoying for the rest of us. They are like that whinny little sister who if she doesn't get her way throws a tantrum. I live in Portland OR and the city itself (not the suburbs where the workers are)is pretty liberal as long as those tax dollars show up every month. With Gordon Smith he has not done anything for the republican party in this state. He wants to be Senator again next year and thinks that becoming a liberal will get him the liberal votes. I think that one of the seasons of the last election is that the candidate has to first get the vote of their party, not to turn them off. Counting on the liberals to vote you in and ignoring your party will make you an ex-senator.

Hagle by Cowboy

100X worse than Hanoi Jane. Hagle is not only helping the enemy he is withholding bullets. Did Bush pee on his shoes? Did his momma ignore him? Drop him on his head? Needs another generation to lose a war? Has he fallen in love with the cameras? See this as his chance to make the history books? Someone please explain this to me.

Explanation re: Hagel. by mbecker908

He's jealous of the great media and all the attention that Okinawa Jack has been getting.

That and he's dumb as a box of rock. (Singular, two rocks are smarter.)
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Those who live by the sword get shot by those who don't.

Like he said today... by iamthewalrus

"Iraq does not belong to the United States." Why are you all so intent on staying there indefinitely? This bill gives Bush a full year and a half to supposedly "win" in Iraq. Didn't he say just two months ago that we should know if the surge is going to work by November? If so, why is the 2008 date so horrible? If Iraq is stable, we leave. If it isn't, there isn't any more we can do.

stupid so you can't see that if we give the bad guys a date, they just hide until the day after the date.

I have never seen such a mindless, spineless, blathering movement of people as those who are demanding that we just surrender and leave.

Pathetic.
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Those who live by the sword get shot by those who don't.

It actually will win the war. 18 months of no violence could cure the ills of Iraq. In fact, that is the whole point of the surge strategy - bring some stability and peace so people believe in the cause.

Is it so bad to let the Iraqi's know they better get their sh*t together and in a hurry?

Face it, the US is going to be out of Iraq after the next presidential elections - either because the job is done or the new president pulls us out.

It's not about bad vs. good guys. There are no simple answers to complex problems.
We are in Iraq to solve each of these problems:
The Sunni are fighting against the Shia,
the Sunni are fighting against Americans,
Shia are fighting against Shia.
Common criminals are killing and stealing and adding to the chaos due to a weak police force.

It is irrelevant to lable one group as "good guy" or "bad guy" when it comes to Sectarian violence. Let's stop sectarian violence, period, or if we can't, let's stop wasting our time.

If you by Cowboy

don't understand telling your enemy what he needs to do to win and exactly how long it will take him to win there is no need to discuss the matter.

If you by rhatican

[The only reason you are still here is because we are experimenting with being more lenient with our banning policy. If you ever explode like this again, you will no longer be here.

Consider yourself the recipient of a second chance, and a cooling-off opportunity.

And just so there's no question, it was the blatant dishonesty, language, and vitriol that earned you this warning - not the fact that you "dissent" from some "party line."

Any questions?

--Jeff, for the Mgmt.]

Have fun too by Doc Holliday

by being banned for vulgarity and lying about other posters. Who here called Reagan a vulgarity as you did?

I have no power so the previous sentence has no weight. But anyone who thinks wars are won by polls to me knows nothing about military history. Funny you bring up Lincoln, I guess you have no idea what his poll numbers were like during the Civil War. I guess you have no idea how "bungled" that war was for many years. I guess you have no idea that the sentiment in the North, from newspapers and the populace, was to quit (redeploy).

Also, this is not about whether the war in Iraq was a good idea. This IS about how some people on this site, and many in the populace have no idea what failure would mean. I will give you a hint, if we leave now, we will have to go back.

Molon Labe!

Cleanup on aisle 5 by Finrod

Spare us the KnownFacts(tm).

---
Internet member since 1987
Member of the Surreality-Based Community

Dealt with (nt) by Jeff Emanuel

Besides, when someone strings forty words together with hyphens to make phrases, it tends to break the page formatting and look ugly. :-)

---
Internet member since 1987
Member of the Surreality-Based Community

Check your history book, by Justin Case

and reference the phased withdrawal of US troops from Vietnam.

I was on the ground there when the 1st and 4th Infantry Divisions folded up their colors and left.

A couple of responses you received dealt with the enemy biding his time in Iraq until we leave - which is what the NVA did in Vietnam once it figured the Americans would be gone in a couple of years.

Two other things you might want to consider.

1) A pullout date will serve to undermine troop morale as engaging the enemy would be something to avoid. Who wants to die for a lost cause?

2)A pullout date will discourage Iraqi civilians from providing aid to coalition forces. The lesson of what happened in Vietnam is not lost on Iraqis. It's doubtful that Al Qaida types would provide Re-education Camps.

As a default you should assume anyone with that title is an out of control egomaniac. Then you can allow them to prove you wrong.
______________________________
"Those who expect to reap the blessings of freedom must, like men, undergo the fatigue of supporting it."
-Thomas Paine: The American Crisis, No. 4, 1777

If the by iamthewalrus

surge works, there should be no "enemy"! Isn't that what Bush has been advocating, securing Baghdad and handing basic security needs over to the Iraqis? THIS DATE IS 16 MONTHS AWAY. Surely if we were able to get the situation under control we should be able to do it by then. Why not leave when "victory" is achieved?

and you'll see how unpredictable things are, and how it is never a good idea to announce to one's enemy that you're leaving by a certain date (so if he can just wait a little longer, you'll disappear).

"Do the day's work."

So in the time that he's waiting, it gives the Iraqi government the so-called breathing space the Bush said Maliki needed to establish infrastructure and independent security. The deadline in the bill is to send a message to the Iraqis: "get your s*** together, because if you don't, we will not be there to clean up the mess." Have you ever thought that a solid, realistic deadline would motivate the Iraqi government to get its act together? As Bush said, our commitment is not open-ended.

It isn't open ended. Just don't put up a game clock.

"take Bush at his word" by iamthewalrus

Four years down the line, his word is not something we can trust.

Bush's word. Miss Nancy's judgment.
Bush's word. Okinawa Jack's judgment.
Bush's word. Harry Reid's judgment.

Looks like a slam dunk to me and I'm no friend of Bush.
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Those who live by the sword get shot by those who don't.

At least by iamthewalrus

they're judgment has not been proven disastrously unreliable over the last five years.

I guess we view sedition by mbecker908

differently.
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Those who live by the sword get shot by those who don't.

I view sedition by iamthewalrus

as hurting the country, not hurting something the country is doing.

You've proven by mbecker908

beyond any doubt that your head is so far from the light, you couldn't view anything in any case...
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Those who live by the sword get shot by those who don't.

this bill is sedition by paulseale

plain and simple.

He said this would be a long war as far back as Afghanistan.
What WMD ? Don't even think about it buckwheat. That works for people with Oatmeal between their ears who can't remember the excuse for a trash can they call their heads.

Show us where he hasn't kept his word. I have problems with this president. He has always been lacking the communication skills the job requires and is far too kind to those who would cheerfully disembowel him, but lying is not one of his faults.
______________________________
"Those who expect to reap the blessings of freedom must, like men, undergo the fatigue of supporting it."
-Thomas Paine: The American Crisis, No. 4, 1777

He assured us the PATRIOT Act was necessary for protecting the nation against terrorism, despite cries from critics citing the potential for abuse. But no, this was legal, necessary, and he gave us his word that this was in our interest.

What pops up in the last two weeks? Surprise surprise, FBI has been blatantly abusing National Security letters.

The ultimate determinant in the struggle now going on for the world will not be bombs and rockets but a test of wills and ideas-a trial of spiritual resolve: the values we hold, the beliefs we cherish and the ideals to which we are dedicated.-Reagan

You have just proved that you can peck two paragraphs on your keyboard without ever engaging that 3 pounds of blood soaked lard between your ears.

Patriot act unnecessary ? I suppose by the same logic improved airport security is unnecessary. Well its over 5 years without a follow up attack. Numerous attacks have been thwarted.

Yes and what you refer to as abuse, the FBI refers to as mistakes. Please show some harm coming to a citizen from your "ABUSE". There isn't any.

I will worry when the FBI has the ability to get the same level of information that the bulk mailers use to offer me refinancing.
______________________________
"Those who expect to reap the blessings of freedom must, like men, undergo the fatigue of supporting it."
-Thomas Paine: The American Crisis, No. 4, 1777

If I am here in the morning I will try to find a humorous global warmer to tear apart.
______________________________
"Those who expect to reap the blessings of freedom must, like men, undergo the fatigue of supporting it."
-Thomas Paine: The American Crisis, No. 4, 1777

http://www.cnn.com/2007/POLITICS/03/27/patriot.act.ap/index.html

"Citing the inspector general report on national security letters and his previous reports criticizing FBI reporting of terrorist cases, of weapons and laptops losses, Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pennsylvania, said, "Every time we turn around there is another enormous failure by the bureau.""

...

"Mueller said he had reduced the problem since learning of it in 2005 but noted that the warrant applications are very long and contain thousands of facts.

"I'm not impressed with your assertion that there are thousands of facts," Specter said. "That's your job. You asked for these powers; we gave you them. If these applications are wrong, you're subjecting people to an invasion of privacy that ought not to be issued.""

...

"In a review of headquarters files and a sampling of four of the FBI's 56 field offices, Inspector General Glenn A. Fine found 48 violations of law or presidential directives during 2003-2005. He estimates there may be as many as 3,000 violations throughout the FBI that have not been identified or reported."

...

"The letters can be used to acquire e-mails, telephone, travel records and financial information, like credit and bank transactions. They can be sent to telephone and Internet access companies, universities, public interest organizations, nearly all libraries, financial and credit companies.

In 2001, the Patriot Act eliminated any requirement that the records belong to someone under suspicion. Now an innocent person's records can be obtained if FBI field agents consider them relevant to an ongoing terrorism or spying investigation."

Try again by Joliphant

you still have presented nothing.

P.S. What you call illegal domestic spying happened without the patriot act. Of course that wasn't on this presidents watch.

Google me this Bill clinton IRS audits, Bill Clinton FBI Files

Enough with you
______________________________
"Those who expect to reap the blessings of freedom must, like men, undergo the fatigue of supporting it."
-Thomas Paine: The American Crisis, No. 4, 1777

"But Clinton did it..." by iamthewalrus

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/12/16/AR200512...

Friday, December 16, 2005; Page A01

President Bush signed a secret order in 2002 authorizing the National Security Agency to eavesdrop on U.S. citizens and foreign nationals in the United States, despite previous legal prohibitions against such domestic spying, sources with knowledge of the program said last night.

The super-secretive NSA, which has generally been barred from domestic spying except in narrow circumstances involving foreign nationals, has monitored the e-mail, telephone calls and other communications of hundreds, and perhaps thousands, of people under the program, the New York Times disclosed last night.

...

The revelations come amid a fierce congressional debate over reauthorization of the USA Patriot Act, an anti-terrorism law passed after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. The Patriot Act granted the FBI new powers to conduct secret searches and surveillance in the United States.

Most of the powers covered under that law are overseen by a secret court that meets at Justice Department headquarters and must approve applications for wiretaps, searches and other operations. The NSA's operation is outside that court's purview, and according to the Times report, the Justice Department may have sought to limit how much that court was made aware of NSA activities."

Rewind to a few months ago, and suddenly the FISA courts are allowed oversight. What a difference an election makes.

Is that you are free to spout the idiocy that you do. If the accusations you make had a shred of truth you would be clapped in irons, and I would be undertaking the thankless chore of freeing you.
______________________________
"Those who expect to reap the blessings of freedom must, like men, undergo the fatigue of supporting it."
-Thomas Paine: The American Crisis, No. 4, 1777

If so, do enlighten me.

A type II supernova couldn't enlighten you.

Show one instance of someone being materially harmed by the patriot act for the benefit of the administration
______________________________
"Those who expect to reap the blessings of freedom must, like men, undergo the fatigue of supporting it."
-Thomas Paine: The American Crisis, No. 4, 1777

Airport security by mrdodgy

As a very frequent flyer, and a licensed pilot with access to secure areas on airfields, I have to say that airport security is frankly, ridiculous and ineffective.

Ridiculous because of what we learned on 9/11. Before then, hijackers demanded to be flown somewhere and demanded something political. After then, hijackers killed you all. Anyone hijacks a US aircraft now, and they would be overwhelmed by the passengers before reaching the cockpit.

Ridiculous in that one guy with some kind of explosive in his shoes, means that everyone now has their shoes x-rayed. Which wouldnt detect well-concealed explosives.

Ridiculous in that a foiled half-baked plot in the UK to smuggle liquid explosive components aboard, means that we now have to carry little clear plastic baggies with child-size toothpaste tubes to show to the nice TSA inspectors when said TSA inspectors fail to notice the half-liter of contact lens solution that I forgot was in my carry-on.

And ineffective because the minimum-wage (but whoo, now US citizen and federal employee) TSA are under-trained, under-staffed and evidently, remarkably incompetent.

And do you know how easy it is to get a ramp pass for a mid-sized airport? They do a criminal records check. I'd assume that any smart terrorist wouldnt have one. Then you watch a 1980s video on how to recognize suspicious middle-eastern men. Then they give you a pass. To walk out around the aircraft.

And why in heck's name do they security screen the pilots?

See above. by mbecker908

Your idiotic argument doesn't get any better by posting it again. I am, however, not surprised since the best tactic your side has is to keep repeating lies and inanities as though they were either truthful or mattered.

Take it elsewhere. We don't suffer fools lightly around here.
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Those who live by the sword get shot by those who don't.

I miss the older, tougher RedState

"Do the day's work."

Down here in the mud, some of us have no such "kinder/gentler" instincts. We've lived through teenagers.
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Those who live by the sword get shot by those who don't.

Why the urge by pagar

to leave Iraq, a conflict that has the potential to determine
whether our future generations can worship as they please or must worship who the terrorists decide we should worship.

Does anyone really think that if we had left South Korea years ago when that conflict slowed, that freedom would have any hold in that area of the world today?

If the threat to religious freedome to Western Civilization is why we can't leave Iraq is what's at issue, then we should have left secular Saddam Hussein in power.

Over and over the terrorists of Iraq, Afghanistan, the leaders of Iran, Hamas and others tell the world they are going to destroy America. Saddam was just another of them. What would leaving him in power have solved?

You are missing the point by prometheus77

The original comment of our mini-thread said that the Iraq conflict can dicate who we worship in the future.
How simplistic is that? Al Qaeda has always had its main front in Pakistan and plotted 9-11 from Afghanistan. This is where the center of the war on terror is located. These are the places where we should have gone in the first place.
Saddam was in power for many, many years. Did he have any bearing in who our generation worshipped?
If Al Qaeda has become a relevant force in Iraq (which it wasn't before the war) it's because it would infiltrate any any Muslim country if invaded by a foreign power such as the US.

of the Presidents post 9/11 speech, when he specifically stated that this conflict will take a long time, engender many sacrifices, and find us ON MANY SHORES. That's a paraphrase, but the point remains.

What point remains? by prometheus77

What part of my comment is refuted by the fact that Bush said the war wold be fought in "many shores"?

(Knuckles cracking) Well; by seattle-ite

Considering the fact that most lefties would scream in self-righteous anger NO MATTER WHERE we went after Afghanistan,I suppose that it would escape your attention that Mr. Pres. DID name Iraq as part of the Axis of Evil, prior to invasion. This set the stage for all the kooks to switch from "Afghanistan is GW's Vietnam", to "[insert country name here] is GW's Vietnam". The point is, you'd still be whining the way you've been throughout this thread, even if we'd invaded N Korea (which, if I read the lefty crybabies right, is still an evil dictatorship, until we attack; then, it'll be [insert President's name here] Vietnam, all over again). It seems, sir, that you won't be satisfied unless Bush declares the GWOT was all his and the 'neo-cons' fault, cooked up over a backyard BBQ in Crawford.
I'll hand it to you; you've got staying power; too bad you keep mouthing the same Dem/lefty talking points that have been refuted time and again.
What you, and the rest of the anti-war crowd don't seem to understand, is that you are bass-ackward in your worldview, and seem prone to selective amnesia. I stated it in another diary; all I hear from the left anymore is how 'we' need to have learned our lessons from Vietnam. Well, I'm still waiting for YOUR side to admit its mistakes.

Who said it would by Cowboy

take 16 months? Security and improvments may take 16 months, maybe less, and then a draw down could take place. We may only need some troops there but you propose letting them hold the ball and run out the clock like a BB game. No way to run a war.

Having said that by Cowboy

Iran is making nasty little toys next door. Got a good Idea what to do about that? Head in the sand doesn't count.

and stop the saber-rattling. The Iranians are beginning to realize that their leader is a whacko and being way too confrontational on the international stage. Economically squeezing the country would bring these sentiments to the forefront and perhaps initiate change from the inside. Not all problems are solved by military confrontation

I would argue by Cowboy

that the pressure the leaders are feeling comes from U.S. troops at their borders and our navy standing by is having an affect. It may embolden the moderates to over throw them. They are supplying Hezbos, Hamas, AQ and all sorts of fun lovers. You have to negotiate through power.

Absolutely by iamthewalrus

Both military and economic leverage are crucial in dealing with Iran. I would suggest, however, that we need to be extremely careful about how we display our military power. The tension is mounting with the British soldiers captured and recent sanctions through the U.N., and we should be careful not to back Iran too far into the corner. Steady pressure is going to resolve this one. But I fear the potential for a Gulf-of-Tonkin-like incident which would set off an international crisis when there need not be one.

We've been in an "International Incident" in the middle East for decades. This current "hot war" is only the most recent stage. Did you spend the last few decades under a rock?

The leadership in Iran by seattle-ite

will not be hurt by squeezing the economy, as much as you think. The Mullahs and their puppet President will still be living high on the hog (so to speak), while the people WE WANT TO RISE UP will start thinking America sucks for starving them. Wake up.

kookoochachoo by hunter

You are an ignorant twit.
Please go back to the pleasures I am sure you find with your Kos Koolaid Kids.

when I was in school but this is March 2007. The supplemental sets a deadline of March 31, 2008.

From the bill:

The President shall commence the phased redeployment of United States forces from Iraq not later than 120 days after the date of the enactment of this Act, with the goal of redeploying, by March 31, 2008, all United States combat forces from Iraq

In most places that is 12 months not 16, but YMMV.

"A man can never have too much red wine, too many books, or too much ammunition." -- Rudyard Kipling

Perhaps by seattle-ite

the poster was thinking of the House bill, which was closer to 16 months. Still, timetables are a bad idea, either way. Unfortunately, the lefties will never understand their own lack of logic.

Hahahahhahahah by E4Puke

Funny stuff. Even if I am on the minority side of the political persuasion I am not going to turn into a bush hating maniac like I see posting everywhere else praying for the death of the president, vice president, and anyone in the administration. Does suck to have a party that ran on defeat and hatred win not only the majority in both houses but now votes on the direction of the war over commanders in the field. Thats why god invented beer though.

Roger, on your last line. by seattle-ite

Thanks for the laugh.

This is not for a 16 month continuation- this is a 16 month retreat. If by July 2007 the president does not certify that all Congressional mandated benchmarks are being achieved then forces must retreat within 180 days. Why are you liberals so opposed to helping the majority of 26 Million people achieve freedom. You don't care about people, your big concern in this world is not how are people living but an flawed idea as global warming. Many hundreds of thousands of people will die or become refugees in a few years if you have your way.

We've been helping by iamthewalrus

for over four years, and look where its gotten us. It's about time we begin to put a definitive end to our occupation there and let Iraq be the sovereign, independent nation we promised them when we invaded.

Millions of Iraqis have been displaced and are already refugees. That is our doing.

This is a result by pagar

of the Democrats continually sending their message to the terrorists that if the terrorists will just keep up the pressure, the Democrats will be be able to force our defeat.

Who are you to tell them that we should be leaving for their sake? Last I checked, the government there has not said one word to us that they want us to leave. Your saying that we should be leaving because of their sovereignty is bogus on its face, because that's not what they want!

So why do you want us to do the opposite of what the Iraqis want, if you're so concerned about Iraq?

---
Internet member since 1987
Member of the Surreality-Based Community

Will the supplimental pass ? If it does Bush will veto it. If it doesnt then the dem's will be back at square one.Every Senator and Congressman that has voted for the supplimental should be held to task by the voters.Many of these so called "conservative" democrats that were elected in November have voted with their leftist brethern.

What really scares me is that the democrat electorate just votes on party loyalty. Issues dont matter. Very sad.

he completely owns the war. He will have vetoed a bill that gives the funds to continue his venture in Iraq.