Posted on October 26, 2007 by Russ Wellen
Zogby’s recent poll asking “Whom would you NEVER vote for president?” was kind of mischievous, wasn’t it? But if I were a member of the Democratic National Committee, not to mention a congressional Democrat, I’d be sweating bullets over it.
A neat 50% claim they would never, even under pain of waterboarding (kidding), cast their presidential [...]
Filed under: Democrats, elections, politics, progressives | Tagged: 2008 presidential election, Hillary Clinton, polls | 32 Comments »
Posted on October 25, 2007 by Martin
It’s heartening to see how Democrats and the American public alike are rallying behind the idea that the major telecom companies should not be immune from prosecution for their role in abetting the NSA’s illegal spying. The common wisdom is that Americans care less about esoteric issues like privacy than those that hit them in [...]
Filed under: 2008 election, 9/11, Bush administration, Congress, Democrats, Privacy, Republicans, civil liberties, civil rights, telecommunications | Tagged: Barack Obama, Chris Dodd, filibuster, FISA, Harry Reid, immunity, NoRetroactiveImmunity.com, NSA, Steny Hoyer, wiretapping | 6 Comments »
Posted on October 25, 2007 by Jim Booth
Something from Mark Fiore for those congressional democrats who keep voting for FISA and war funding, and can’t seem to muster the political will to treat Bush like the lame duck he is:
Spineocrat!
Filed under: Bush administration, Congress, Democrats, Republicans | Tagged: , real democracy, the people's will | 1 Comment »
Posted on October 24, 2007 by Dr. Denny
Our purpose is, and has always been, to ensure a civil and safe environment where the many types of campus activities and open discourse can occur.
— University of Florida Police Chief Linda Stump. According to an Oct. 25 Associated Press story: “University of Florida police were justified in using a Taser against a student who [...]
Filed under: 2008 election, Bush administration, Congress, Democrats, National Security, Public Health, Science, campaign finance, civil liberties, climate change, corruption, environment, politics | Tagged: AT&T, Biden, CDC, Clinton, Dodd, Edwards, Gerberding, Gravel, Jenna Bush, Kucinich, Obama, Richardson, Rockefeller, Taser, Verizon | 2 Comments »
Posted on October 19, 2007 by Martin
“Why does Harry Reid hate America and freedom?”
That’s the question I was asking myself after S&R reader “Dee Loralei” pointed out in comments to my post yesterday that Senate Majority Leader Reid was planning to move ahead with a vote on the FISA update, even in the face of Dodd’s hold on the bill. [...]
Filed under: 2008 election, Bush administration, Congress, Constitution, Democrats, Homeland Security, National Security, Privacy, Republicans, civil liberties, civil rights, politics, telecommunications | Tagged: AT&T, Chris Dodd, Constitution, filibuster, FISA, Harry Reid, Intelligence Committee, Jay Rockefeller, NSA, opensecrets.org, Ryan Singel | 4 Comments »
Posted on October 18, 2007 by Martin
It was largely expected, but no less disappointing to wake up this morning and find out that Senate Democrats on the Intelligence Commitee agreed to carry water for the Bush administration by granting retroactive immunity to the telecom companies involved in the NSA’s warrantless wiretapping scandal:
The draft Senate bill has the support of the [...]
Filed under: 1st Amendment, 2008 election, Bush administration, Busheviks, Congress, Constitution, Democrats, National Security, Privacy, Republicans, corruption, politics, telecommunications | Tagged: AT&T, Chris Dodd, Democrats, FISA, George Bush, Glenn Greenwald, immunity, Intelligence Committee, Jay Rockefeller, Judiciary Committee, Mike McConnell, NSA, Republicans, Verizon, wiretapping | 8 Comments »
Posted on October 16, 2007 by Martin
In response to an inquiry launched by House Democrats as to the role the major telecoms played in abetting the NSA surveillance program, Verizon came out yesterday and admitted that it had turned over customer data to federal authorities 720 times between 2005 and 2007–or once a day, every day, for the last two years:
The [...]
Filed under: Bush administration, Busheviks, Constitution, Democrats, Homeland Security, Justice Department, National Security, Privacy, Republicans, civil liberties, corporate governance, corruption, politics, telecommunications | Tagged: ACLU, Arlen Specter, AT&T, Cindy Cohn, Congress, corruption, Democrats, DOJ, EFF, FBI, FISA, NSA, Patrick Leahy, Republicans, Spencer Ackerman, surveillance, Verizon, warrants, wiretapping | 3 Comments »
Posted on October 14, 2007 by Martin
That’s the accusation levied by disgraced former Qwest CEO Joe Nacchio, who claims that he was approached by officials from the Bush administration to bring his company into an NSA surveillance program in February 2001–as in, several months before the 9/11 attacks, and contradicting claims made by the White House that 9/11 was the reason [...]
Filed under: Bush administration, Constitution, Democrats, National Security, Privacy, Republicans, civil liberties, corporate governance, corruption, politics | Tagged: Alberto Gonzales, AT&T, Bush administration, call records, data mining, GSA, James Comey, Joe Nacchio, John Ashcroft, Lurita Doan, Mark Klein, NSA, Qwest, Ryan Singel, Slate, Sprint, surveillance, Verizon, warrantless, Wired, wiretapping | 9 Comments »
Posted on October 11, 2007 by Dr. Denny
We have a responsibility to provide a moral framework for our kids.
— John Arthur Eaves Jr., Democratic candidate for governor in Mississippi, who once “rebuked the Democratic National Committee for leaving Jesus out of an Easter statement” and says he wants a “new day in Mississippi, where our children go to school with voluntary, student-led [...]
Filed under: 1st Amendment, 2008 election, 9/11, Democrats, Religion, Republicans, campaign finance, capitalism, entertainment, politics, social networks, terrorism | Tagged: Fred Thompson, freeculture.org, Generation Q, hedge funds, John Edwards, Mississippi, RIAA, Rudy Giuliani, thomas friedman | 4 Comments »
Posted on October 10, 2007 by Martin
Although this Reuters article does a masterful job of burying the lead (as Denny would say), the fact remains–the House Judiciary Committee refused to grant immunity to telecom companies for illegal spying in their FISA law update
[T]he House Judiciary Committee voted 21-14 to reject an amendment sought by the White House that would shield telecommunications [...]
Filed under: 2008 election, Bush administration, Democrats, National Security, Republicans, civil liberties, corruption, telecommunications, totalitarianism | Tagged: Bush, Constitution, Democrats, EFF, FISA, Free Press, Judiciary Committee, Republicans, Steny Hoyer, telecoms, wiretapping | 3 Comments »
Posted on October 8, 2007 by Martin
If Ellen Nakashima’s article in yesterday’s Washington Post is to be believed, the upcoming reassessment of the new FISA law is going to be even worse than what was originally passed:
House Democrats plan to introduce a bill this week that would let a secret court issue one-year “umbrella” warrants to allow the government to intercept [...]
Filed under: 1st Amendment, 2008 election, Democrats, politics | Tagged: AT&T, Democrats, FISA, John Conyers, Justice Department, Marcy Wheeler, Matt Stoller, NSA, Protect America Act, Silvestre Reyes, surveillance, Verizon, Vichy, Washington Post, William Barr, wiretapping | 6 Comments »
Posted on October 4, 2007 by Sam Smith
Once upon a time in America there was a thing called the “public interest.” The airwaves were a publicly owned resource, and broadcasters profiting from their use were obliged to serve “the public interest, convenience and necessity.” These principles were codified in 1927 and 1934 legislation and were accepted (if not universally loved) for decades. [...]
Filed under: Democracy, Democrats, Iraq, Republicans, media, politics | Tagged: Brian McGough, Clear Channel, Daniel Brenner, David Petraeus, Fairness Doctrine, FCC, Federal Communication Commission, Mark Fowler, MoveOn, public interest, Ronald Reagan, Rush Limbaugh, talk radio, VoteVets, WJNO | 24 Comments »
Posted on October 3, 2007 by Brian Angliss
Yesterday, Democratic representatives David Obey (Wi), John Murtha (PA), and Jim McGovern (MA) proposed a 2% surtax for low and middle income taxpayers and 12-15% for upper income taxpayers in order to pay for the $150 billion costs of the Iraq occupation in 2008. The response, both by the Democratic leadership and the Republicans [...]
Filed under: Congress, Democrats, Iraq, Republicans, politics | 4 Comments »
Posted on October 1, 2007 by Martin
This weekend George Bush did something so out-of-character that it seems impossible to believe–he signed into law new legislation that will actually benefit the American people. Specifically new laws that overhaul the corrupt and bloated student loan system:
The law, which received overwhelming bipartisan support in Congress, will slash federal subsidies to private loan companies and [...]
Filed under: Bush administration, Democrats, education | Tagged: bankruptcy, credit cards, Daniel Brook, debt, Democrats, economics, G.I. Bill, George Bush, Kevin Bruns, predatory lenders, Student Loans, subsidies, The Trap | 14 Comments »
Posted on September 24, 2007 by Martin
Just as the condemnation of MoveOn.org’s “General Betrayus” ad ensured a spike in the organization’s funding and donations, George Bush seems set to do the same for Barack Obama’s campaign, thanks to some hysterically funny slamming of Obama’s intellect and ability in today’s Examiner :
As for Obama, a senior White House official said the freshman [...]
Filed under: 2008 election, Democrats, Republicans, citizen journalism, journalism, liberals, media, politics | Tagged: astroturf, autism, Bill Sammon, GOP, Karl Rove, media journalism, Regnery Publishing, The Examiner, Washington Times | 4 Comments »