DOUGDarrel wrote:DAR
I've told you what you need to do to get your case off the ground. What I have asked for is not unreasonable.
I've cited evidence that Obama's admnistration currently engages in warrantless wiretaps. The HuffPo article makes clear reference to the use of warrantless wiretaps.
I've shown that Obama defends Bush's use of warrantless wiretaps.
I've shown that Obama's administration is saying that they will "reign in" this use.
There will be a top-secret review of their wiretap use.
I'm not using the cartoon as evidence, despite your apparent understanding that I am doing so.
You have provided NO evidence at all that Obama is not using warrantless wiretaps.
DOUGDAR
Your article is entitled "NSA Wiretapping: Justice Department Reining It In" not "NSA Warrentless Wiretapping: Justice Department Reining It."
The title is not the evidence. The article is. This was the big fight last year regarding what the NSA can or can't do. We know what the NSA was doing and what it continues to do. There is no doubt that they are engaging in warrantless wiretapping. That's what Bush was fighting Congress about. It was all over the news. Bush kept the program going and Obama has not stopped the program.
DOUGDAR
If Congress provides approval for an action, this would seem to me to provide "warrant" for an action and would qualify for me as proper oversight. And I have no problem with the details of this being kept secret (I have my ACLU renewal form on my desk right now so my civil liberty credentials are intact and supported by action).
Congress has provided very careful guidelines as to how these warrantless wiretaps can be used. Bush won that fight, unfortunately. So is it illegal? I say it is unconstitutional. But that is not the issue here. The issue we are discussing is whether warrantless wiretaps are being used by the Obma administration. They are. I've provided evidence, you have provided nothing.
Now Obama even wants to get cell phone records without a warrant.
Here's a May 12, 2009 article on how the ACLU wants to fight the "warrantless spying" on U.S. citizens.
Surely you don't think the ACLU would get worked up about a program that is not currently in place.Now at the top of the list for Obama’s First 100 Days, high on the [ACLU's] agenda is to fight the “warrantless spying” of “U.S. persons,” meaning American citizens and residents not being called on the phone or e-mailed by al Queda, like peace groups, environmental groups, and well, ACLU activists.
When are you going to provide even the slightest bit of evidence that Obama ended Bush's warrantless wiretap policy? I provide evidence, and you don't. That's what makes me silly, I guess.