BuelahMan’s Redstate Revolt

A Redneck’s Guide To Reversing The Right Wing Brainwashing

Archive for the 'Big Telecom' Category


Must Avoid TV: When Olbermann Became Owned

Posted by buelahman on June 27, 2008

He used to put on a decent show. He would rave and rant at the right times. He made it “acceptable” to accuse the President of his shenanigans and evil-doing. He helped many Americans realize that the Right has taken over, by brute force, the airways and mindset of the American people, even though many Americans knew these things to be against their core values and beliefs.

Keith used to help me to feel like we had hope that the political movement “could” be changed. That maybe, just maybe, someone from the progressive side of the political spectrum could actually become a voice again. But, slowly and surely, he has become owned by “them” and I feel he has either been told something that changed his mind or he is a flip-flopper on one of the most crucial things happening today in Washigton.

I have found myself becoming less attentive to his show and over the last week or so have not really watched at all. Why? Because he has fallen for the Obama rhetoric and has totally capitulated on a Special Comment regarding the telecom immunity deal that Obama now flip-floppingly supports (his flip-flops are becoming quite regular now).

So Keith has decided that it isn’t so bad now that Obama has capitulated to Big Telecom’s influence and has decided that Mr Obama simply knows something the rest doesn’t and that stopping the civil court process will enable a super-secret Criminal attack when Obama wins. Its all planned and we should believe that they will be held accountable in the future. Just elect him to get it done, I suppose (the carrot dangles before the Progressives, again).

Keith, who still holds some of my admiration, has become just another TV personality. You know, the kind that you can’t trust for anything truthful, but will be controlled by other rationale. They all seem to do it. I still hold out hope for Bill Moyers.

Glenn Greenwald took Keith to task about this and Olbermann replied… thing is, with Glenn, you better have your shit together, for he will proverbially spank you if you bullshit him. I recommend everyone subscribing to his blog.

In his Kos reply, Olbermann pronounces that my piece yesterday was “simplistic and childish” but then adds the standard dismissive Journalist defense: “I don’t know much about Mr. Greenwald and I didn’t read his full piece.” He says that he refrained from criticizing Obama’s support for the FISA bill in reliance on John Dean’s comments, and “John Dean is the smartest person I’ve ever met” and “John Dean is worth 25 Glenn Greenwalds” — so that settles that (for what it’s worth, I also have a high opinion of Dean’s legal acumen; hosted his appearance at FDL’s Book Salon; don’t disagree with him about this bill at all; have communicated with him about many issues; and he has said many complimentary things about my work in the past, so waving the flag of Dean’s Unassailable Authority establishes nothing).

Olbermman then denies that he was justifying Obama’s support for the FISA bill but then goes on to do exactly that:

Seriously, there is little in the polls to suggest McCain has anything to run with other than terror . . . . So why hand them a brick to hit him with — Obama Voted Against FISA — if voting Aye enhances his chances of getting himself his own Attorney General to prosecute FISA.

How can Olbermann accuse me of distorting his commentary and deny that he’s rationalizing Obama’s support for the bill and then write the above — which does nothing but justify Obama’s support for the bill? That’s exactly the mentality I was criticizing yesterday — that Obama should be excused for supporting this assault on core Constitutional liberties and the rule of law because doing so is necessary to avoid appearing Weak on Terrorism. That’s the behavior which Obama has repeatedly vowed to reject, and it’s that precise mentality that has to be extinguished, not perpetuated.

Isn’t it amazing how Keith finds himself in such a mixed up conundrum? I call it hypocrisy.

to give Obama a pass on his support for such a heinous bill — one which Dean himself describes as a grave assault on the Constitution — based on this imagined secret plan for the Good that Obama is harboring is to illustrate exactly the sort of blind faith in political leaders that is so dangerous. That’s been the Right’s mentality to excuse every last thing Bush does:

It may look to you like Bush is breaking the law or doing something wrong, but he’s a Good person and so we can trust in him that he’s doing it for our own Good, even when he doesn’t tell us why he’s doing it and even when he keeps his real motives a secret. He probably has a good reason for doing these things and we don’t need to know what that is. Besides, we’re facing such an extreme crisis that it’s more important to support him than criticize him even when we don’t understand why he’s doing something and even when we don’t know what it is that he’s doing.

No political leader deserves that sort of blind faith — not Bush and not Obama.

There is so much more in Glenn’s article, but let me finish with the following observation that I totally agree with. I am sick and tired of hearing about chnage in how leadership operates. I want to SEE IT IN ACTION!

As he mentions in his Kos diary, Olbermann had the vocally pro-Obama Markos Moulitsas on his show on Monday night and tried to get Markos to embrace this excuse for Obama. Markos rejected it emphatically:

OLBERMANN: But to the point of the Constitution, John Dean made a fascinating point on this news hour on Friday. He read this bill and he knows a little something about the Constitution, too. He says it’s so sloppily written that nothing in there would rule out later criminal liabilities for the telecom companies.Could that be, actually, what Obama is counting on, just sort of cede this civil action stuff which is basically in lieu of sending these people to jail and just concentrate on, you know, closing up whatever perceived weakness there is of the Democrats being soft on counterterror and, in fact, just hold a bigger punch back until after the election?

MOULITSAS: Well, if that’s the strategy, he has said nothing to indicate that and this is not the sort of thing that I think you have to keep quiet and secretive. I mean, if that’s his strategy, he can say, “This is a bill that’s flawed,” but, really at the end of the day he has a chance to stand for the Constitution and to show that he will protect it against forces that seek to undermine it and he will show that he has, like I said before, that he is a leader and will take the mantle of leadership on this issue and take control of the Democratic Party.

Markos — who observed: “I don’t think he’s going to lose any support, I mean, let’s be honest. I mean, it’s either Obama or John McCain” — nonetheless added:

I think what’s at stake, though, is a lot of the intensity of support for Barack Obama. And he spent the last two years telling us how he’s going to be the leader of the free world, not to mention the Democratic Party and this nation . . . . I don’t want to hear him talk about leadership. I don’t want to hear him talk about defending the Constitution; I want to see him do it.

That is precisely the point, and of course those who believe in defending core constitutional liberties shouldn’t remain quiet when any politician — including Obama — takes actions to erode them.

Posted in Accountability, Barack Obama, Big Media, Big Telecom, Demublican/Repubocrat Party, Glenn Greenwald | Tagged: | 3 Comments »

Richard Noggin’ Saturday: Steny Hoyer

Posted by buelahman on June 21, 2008

Posted in Big Telecom, Demublican/Repubocrat Party, Telecom Immunity | Tagged: | No Comments »

Goodbye AT&T

Posted by buelahman on June 16, 2008

Quick note about AT&T and Bellsouth. I was a long time customer of their’s, even after the purchase. The service was always very good and I could not really complain about much of anything.

However, since becoming aware of their compliance to Bush’s request to give over American citizen’s information and bowed to the tactics of criminals to make a buck; and considering that our government is owned by them and people (leadership, supposedly) like Steny Hoyer and others are doing anything and everything to allow these bastards to get off scott-free from their law-breaking, I have but one solution.

Cancel all accounts and feed them no more of my money. If more people would do this (there are others to choose from), then they would get the picture, anyway.

I had one of the greatest sense of accomplishments when I called a few minutes ago and canceled the account that I kept temporarily to avoid customer confusion. The operator asked why and I was happy to tell her. I also asked that she make sure she noted my reasoning. She did.

I explained that I did not blame her, but I do hold her company accountable and if this is the only way, I hope that she can find another job, working for someone with integrity and the American spirit in mind. Not crooks and liars.

I ask you all to join me, if possible.

Fuck AT&T and the Bush Horse they rode in on…

Posted in Accountability, Big Telecom, Bush, Neocon Criminals, Telecom Immunity | Tagged: , | No Comments »

B’Man’s Hometown Update: One For The Little Guy (Almost)

Posted by buelahman on May 25, 2008

From the Tishomingo County News:

The Tishomingo County Sherrif’s Department has recovered copper wire from a scrap yard in the county with an approximate value of $13,000.

The copper wire was taken from AT&T phone lines in the county, causing some AT&T customers to loose service due to the theft, said Jamie Reynolds, Chief Deputy. The scrap yard operator cooperated with investigators, and had been watching for stolen material.

The amount taken from the lines was about 2,600 feet and the valur of copper wire is about $5 a foot.

AT&T is repairing the damaged lines, replacing about 550 feet to restore phone service…

B’Man: OK, I don’t agree with theft and if people lost phone service, that could have been a dangerous action (in case of emergency or whatever). But the fact that people are cutting down phone lines (I assume it was suspended instead of buried???) for the money is telling. Different scrap yards and recycling centers are busier than ever before. People are selling all sorts of metal stuff… junk… whatever, just to make ends meet.

This isn’t simply “criminality”, it is just as many (or more) people simply trying to eat and survive. This is “poor” country, folks. Really poor.

So, kudos to the ones who give the scandalous bastards at AT&T, the ones who have spied on me and you and made money from it. The ones who profits mean more than the citizen’s rights to privacy.

More importantly (to me, anyway), it was graduation ceremonies for the 2008 grads from Tish County on Thursday night (I couldn’t make it because of my back, unfortunately). Camillia (my beautiful niece) graduated and plans to continue her education via scholarships and grants. Your Mom has done well.

“Nanny” is retiring. Virginia Wallace (mom of one of my good friends from highschool and college and my hair stylist for many years) is giving up the shop to her daughter (Gail). I have spent many nights in her house and know her to be a tremendously kind and loving person (now if I could say the same thing about Billy… j/k). Good luck, Nanny.

Town and Country furniture rising from the ashes. The store burned about 18 months ago. This business has been around for quite some time and now is reopened with the Grand Opening all weekend. Good Luck, Jeff. The coffee shop may be a culture shock for many of your customers. LOL

Local water associations post the water cleanliness levels. I must admit, the water is excellent in my home town and if this report is any indication, it appears clean as a whistle.

Till next time…

Posted in B'Man's Hometown Update, Big Money, Big Telecom, Telecom Immunity | Tagged: | No Comments »

Free Evenings and Weekends by Max and the Marginalized

Posted by buelahman on April 22, 2008

B’Man: Another one by Max and the Marginalized that I particularly liked:

Rock Against Telecom Immunity!

A song for the telecom companies that broke the law and complied with the administration’s domestic spying program to play while they put you on hold. Enjoy “Free Evenings and Weekends”.

Free Evenings and Weekends

Call me on the telephone, I’ve got time on my plan
I know that no one’s listening, but I know that they can
A little bit of oversight for transparency’s sake
It takes a special criminal
To break a law that there is no reason to break

Evenings and weekends are free
For them to listen in on you and me
And I can’t possibly see
How you and I could ever be
If we go back in time
To when a telephone call it cost just a dime
And a crime was a crime
And we demanded a better excuse than “It’s different this time.”

Carry an agenda in on the backs of the dead
We tried to throw the book at them, they keep moving their heads
In spite of this duplicity I write them a check every month
And in light of their complicity
It’s time that we charged them for once

Evenings and weekends are free
For them to listen in on you and me
And I can’t possibly see
How you and I could ever be
If we go back in time
To when the opposition had something that looked like a spine
And a crime was a crime
And we demanded a better excuse than “It’s different this time

Posted in Big Money, Big Telecom, Bush, Max and the Marginalized, Music, Neocon Criminals, ReTHUGlican, Telecom Immunity, Video | No Comments »

Richard Noggin Saturday: Alberto GonzoClone

Posted by buelahman on March 29, 2008

LATE BREAKING Richard Noggin Addition:

As of 10PM last night, this prick took over as Dickhead of the week.

glenn-at-lorenzos.jpg

The Political “Scribe” has been “scribbled” off the Redstate Revolt Honor Roll and added to the lying, Yankee Asshole Roll. 

Hey, Schumer and Feinstein: Are you happy you have endorsed and enabled Mr Gonzales’ Clone of Lying Scumbaggery? When I saw Mr Mukasey make these remarks, tear up and quiver his lip, I didn’t feel his “pain”… I felt outrage. I felt outrage because I know that what he is saying is a downright lie meant to mislead Americans and play on our Patriotic sympathies.

Then, knowing that Mukasey was the Richard Noggin of this week, I read Glenn Greenwald’s piece and understand that I cannot put it any better way:

Michael Mukasey has conclusively proven himself to be an exact replica of Alberto Gonazles — slavishly loyal to every presidential whim and unbound by even the most minimal constraints of truth while serving those whims. Speaking in San Fransisco this week, Mukasey demanded that the President be given new warrantless eavesdropping powers and that lawbreaking telecom be granted amnesty. To make his case, Mukasey teared up while exploiting the 3,000 Americans who died on 9/11 and said this:

Officials “shouldn’t need a warrant when somebody with a phone in Iraq picks up a phone and calls somebody in the United States because that’s the call that we may really want to know about. And before 9/11, that’s the call that we didn’t know about. We knew that there has been a call from someplace that was known to be a safe house in Afghanistan and we knew that it came to the United States. We didn’t know precisely where it went.

At that point in his answer, Mr. Mukasey grimaced, swallowed hard, and seemed to tear up as he reflected on the weaknesses in America’s anti-terrorism strategy prior to the 2001 attacks. “We got three thousand. . . . We’ve got three thousand people who went to work that day and didn’t come home to show for that,” he said, struggling to maintain his composure.

At the time of the attacks, Mr. Mukasey was the chief judge at the federal courthouse a few blocks away from the World Trade Center.These are multiple falsehoods here, and independently, this whole claim makes no sense. There is also a pretty startling new revelation here about the Bush administration’s pre-9/11 failure that requires a good amount of attention.

Even under the “old” FISA, no warrants are requiredwhere the targeted person is outside the U.S. (Afghanistan) and calls into the U.S. Thus, if it’s really true, as Mukasey now claims, that the Bush administration knew about a Terrorist in an Afghan safe house making Terrorist-planning calls into the U.S., then they could have — and should have — eavesdropped on that call and didn’t need a warrant to do so. So why didn’t they? Mukasey’s new claim that FISA’s warrant requirements prevented discovery of the 9/11 attacks and caused the deaths of 3,000 Americans is disgusting and reckless, because it’s all based on the lie that FISA required a warrant for targeting the “Afghan safe house.” It just didn’t. Nor does the House FISA bill require individual warrants when targeting a non-U.S. person outside the U.S.

They perpetually lie about issues that are key fear factor points for Americans. Then, this nasty little man, who obviously misled congress during hearings, plays on emotions of people with clear lying intent. Make no mistake that he knows exactly what is legal and what is not.

But he didn’t stop there, he is insisting that the Telecom Companies being protected:

Mukasey was even more dishonest in demanding amnesty for lawbreaking telecoms. According to today’s admiring Wall St. Journal Editorial, this is what Mukasey said on that subject:

The AG also addressed why immunity from lawsuits is vital for the telecom companies that cooperated with the surveillance after 9/11. “Forget the liability” the phone companies face, Mr. Mukasey said. “We face the prospect of disclosure in open court of what they did, which is to say the means and the methods by which we collect foreign intelligence against foreign targets.” Al Qaeda would love that.

Mike Mukasey was a long-time federal judge and so I feel perfectly comfortable calling that what it is: a brazen lie. Federal courts hear classified information with great regularity and it is not heard in “open court.” There are numerous options available to any federal judge to hear classified information — closed courtrooms, in camera review (in chambers only), ex partecommunications (communications between one party and the judge only). No federal judge — and certainly not Vaughn Walker, the Bush 41 appointee presiding over the telecom cases — is going to allow “disclosure in open court of . . . . the means and the methods by which we collect foreign intelligence.” And Mukasey knows that.

Worse, FISA itself (50 USC 1806(f)) explicitly provides that telecoms are permitted to present any evidence in support of their defenses in secret (both in camera and ex parte) to the judge and let the judge decide the case based on it. Just go read 50 USC 1806(f)of FISA; it’s as clear as day. In fact, it doesn’t merely permit, but explicitly requires, the federal judge to review evidence in secret whenever the Attorney General requests that (”the United States district court in the same district . . . shall, notwithstanding any other law, if the Attorney General files an affidavit under oath that disclosure or an adversary hearing would harm the national security of the United States, review in camera and ex parte the application the application, order, and such other materials relating to the surveillance.”).

But Mukasey also lies about what Americans want, and especially what New Yorkers want:

Michael Mukasey can cry all he wants about the 9/11 attacks. But neither he nor the rest of the Bush administration are the proprieters of those attacks. There were millions of New Yorkers in Manhattan on 9/11 other than Michael Mukasey, who lived and worked there for a long time. Neither Mike Mukasey nor his tearful pleas for unchecked government surveillance power and the erosion of the rule of law are representative of them.

To the contrary, the substantial majority of New Yorkers — and huge majorities of Manhattanites– vehemently reject the Bush/Cheney agenda of dismantling our constitutional framework and basic safeguards in the name of these sorts of fear-mongering and manipulative appeals. Unlike Mukasey and other Bush followers, most New Yorkers have ceased quivering in fear long ago — if they ever did — and have had their resolve to defend our basic constitutional liberties strengthened, not obliterated, as a result of the 9/11 attack and the subsequent, self-serving exploitation of it by Mukasey’s White House bosses. And under no circumstances do Mukasey’s tears provide license for this tidal wave of lies in defense of presidential lawlessness, from our nation’s highest “law enforcement officer.”

The Boehner Crybaby routine is old and tired, Mike. It may play with the assembled crowds within the 31% that worships your King, but the rest are wise to the foolishness.

Investigate. Impeach.

Posted in Big Telecom, Bush, Cheney, Corruption, Glenn Greenwald, Mike Mukasey, Neocon Criminals, ReTHUGlican, Richard Noggin Saturday, impeachment | No Comments »

Hiding In Clear Sight

Posted by buelahman on March 22, 2008

From lrose, this is an excellent breakdown of the Aug 2006 case against the administration on wiretapping and other law-breaking against Americans and the Constitution. This article (was written as an email) lays out how Judge Taylor holds these crooks accountable (and Bush now is awaiting his cronies to reverse the decision). But, until I read thru the following, there are several points of edification that others may appreciate, as well, and proved to me that the MSM simply is not going to consider these criminals any way except with undying admiration.

This decision is virtually a one-hundred percent victory for the plaintiffs. While President Bush has already dismissed this opinion seeking solace in his hope that the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals will reverse this decision, Judge Taylor has written a basic civics lesson within this decision. She explains to President Bush that the document his administration has ignored in exercising these powers, the US Constitution, is the very same document that creates the Presidency of the United States.
Unsurprisingly, this decision is incredibly well-written and well-researched. The lawyering performed on behalf of the plaintiffs in this matter must be commended, as my first-year law professor, Walt Oberer, taught the most important thing a lawyer can do when arguing his case to the Court is provide the Court with an easy peg to hang their hat on.. In light of past cases wherein the Executive branch has been able to cite state secrets privilege to carry the day, the plaintiffs in this matter sought no discovery whatsoever, no document production, no interrogatories proposed and no depositions requested. The attorneys relied solely upon the public statements of the Bush Administration to prove that the NSA wiretapping program violated the:
Separation of Powers Doctrine
Administrative Procedures Act
First Amendment to the US Constitution
Fourth Amendment to the US Constitution
FISA
Title III
And the Court decision found in favor of the Plaintiffs.

IT IS FURTHER ORDERED AND DECLARED that the TSP violates the Separation of Powers doctrine, the Administrative Procedures Act, the First and Fourth Amendments to the United States Constitution, the FISA and Title III.

Judgment and Permanent Injunction Order 8-17-06
The Court found undisputed that since 2002, NSA has intercepted international telephone and internet communications of numerous people and organizations without benefit of warrant or other judicial approval and that President Bush has reauthorized this power over 30 times in the past five years. The Court further found that the various individual Plaintiffs had been specifically harmed in their practice of law, journalism and scholarship as the illegal wiretapping program had, and continued to, substantially chill and impair their constitutionally protected communications.
From labeling the Presidential power relied upon to being from the twilight zoneto referencing the star chamber, this decision is peppered with implicit condemnations at an administration that has made a mockery of the United States Constitution, the separation of powers and Fourth Amendment.
*STATE SECRETS PRIVILEGE*


Excellent strategic decisions of the Plaintiffs helped avoid the perils of the state secrets privilege that previously doomed the claim of an individual who challenged extraordinary rendition performed by this administration. The state secrets privilege is an evidentiary rule developed to prevent the disclosure of information which may be detrimental to national security… the privilege belongs to the Government and must be asserted by it.


This privilege is set into two distinct categories, the espionage claim and the `reasonable danger posed to national security’ claim. If the Government asserts the privilege, then the Court must determine whether the circumstances are appropriate for the claim of privilege.

Where there is a strong showing of necessity, the claim of privilege should not be lightly accepted, but even the most compelling necessity cannot overcome the privilege if the court is ultimately satisfied that military secrets are at stake.” The Court took this opportunity to make its first slap at the administrations abuse of its executive authority and privilege,
Predictably, the War on Terror of this administration has produced a vast number of cases, in which the state secrets privilege has been invoked.

Thereafter, the Court rules that this privilege claim falls under 2nd type of State Secrets claim but fails to protect the NSA wiretapping program because the Plaintiffs have not sought any additional discovery but simply rely upon the public statements of this administration to prove the elements of their claims.
The Court notes:

The Bush Administration has repeatedly told the general public that there is a valid basis in law for the TSP.” Radio Address of President Bush.
“I authorized the National Security Agency, consistent with U.S. Law and the Constitution, to intercept the international communications of people with known links to Al Qaeda and related terrorist organizations.”

In fact, Judge Taylor set out that the defendants filed both public affidavits of John Negroponte, Director of National Intelligence, and NSA Major General Richard Quirk, as well as “ex parte and in camera versions of its brief along with other classified information” attempting to further buttress the Government’s assertion of the states secrets privilege.
After finding that the Government had followed the appropriate procedure to assert the states secret privilege, the Court analyzed whether the `classified information’ was at all necessary to defend the claims of the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs asserted that no secret information was needed to prove their claims, but the claims could be ruled upon solely based on the public disclosures and admissions of this administration.
Judge Taylor agreed:

the court has reviewed the classified information and is of the opinion that this information is not necessary to any viable defense to the” wire tapping program of the NSA.

The Court found that the administration had publicly admitted that:

(1) the (wire tapping) program exists;
(2) it operates without warrants;
(3) it targets communications where one party to the communication is outside the U.S., and the government has a reasonable basis to conclude that one party to the communication is a member of Al Qaeda, affiliated with Al Qaeda, or a member of an organization affiliated with Al Qaeda, or working in support of Al Qaeda.

As the Government has on many occasions confirmed the veracity of these allegations, the state secrets privilege does not apply to this information… Plaintiffs are able to establish a prima facie case based solely on Defendants’ public admissions.”
The Court also found that the Plaintiffs had satisfied the need to show actual harm as well as a causal connection between the harm suffered and the program being challenged:

The Plaintiffs were able to establish that they were individually suffering `real and concrete harm’ as they were

`stifled in their ability to vigorously conduct research, interact with sources, talk with clients and, in the case of the attorney plaintiffs, uphold their oath of providing effective and ethical representations of their clients… Plaintiffs would be able to continue using the telephone and email in the execution of their professional responsibilities if the defendants were not undisputedly and admittedly conducting warrantless wiretaps of conversations.”" Again, the Court references the bad faith shown by this Administration:
the court finds Defendants’ argument that they cannot defend this case without the use of classified information to be disingenuous and without merit.” And so begins Civics 101, from a Federal Judge to a Presidential Administration that has acted as, and stated that, it operates above and beyond the law.
it was never the intent of the Framers to give the President such unfettered control, particularly where his actions blatantly disregard the parameters clearly enumerated in the Bill of Rights. The three separate branches of government were developed as a check and balance for one another. It is within the court’s duty to ensure that power is never “condensed into a single branch of government. We must always be mindful that when the president takes official action, the Court has the authority to determine whether he has acted within the law. ‘It remains one of the most vital functions of this Court to police with care the separation of powers. When structure fails, liberty is always in peril.’ Interestingly, after finding the state secrets privilege inapplicable and that the Plaintiffs did indeed present a case or controversy, Judge Taylor shows her hand in finding in favor of the Plaintiffs. Only then does the Court recite its evaluation of the substantive aspect of most of the claims. The Court follows with historical need for:

1. Congressional oversight of Governmental Electronic Surveillance;
2. the Fourth Amendment; and
3. the Separation of Powers;
while disabusing this Administration of its self-professed notion that it’s inherent powers far exceed those of Congress and the limits placed on the executive office by the Constitution.
HISTORY of ELECTRONC SURVEILLANCE


In 1967, Justice Stewart wrote for the Supreme Court,

`searches conducted without prior approval by a judge or magistrate were per se unreasonable under the fourth amendment.” Reacting to this opinion, Congress, in 1968, enacted Title III of the Omnibus Crime Control Act that required warrants and applications under oath for permission to make electronic interceptions of various communications. In fact, this statute allowed for post-interception warrants to be issued in certain emergency situations.

In 1976, the Congressional “`Church Committee’ disclosed that every president since 1946 had engaged in warrantless wiretaps in the name of national security, and that there had been numerous political abuses.”
In 1978, in response, Congress enacted FISA.
Subsequently, Title III was amended to state that

the FISA of 1978 shall be the exclusive means by which electronic surveillance of foreign intelligence communications may be conducted.” In fact, for various emergency reasons, FISA authorizes the government to take an extension of time to conduct interception of communications before applying for post-interception authority.

FISA does not bar the administration’s NSA program. It just requires that this conduct eventually pass judicial muster through a warrant process. In fact, FISA allows these warrant applications to be posed to a secret court in order to safeguard the secrecy of the program for which the warrant is being requested.
*THE FOURTH AMENDMENT*


As the Civics Lesson continues, the Judge explains, with Revolutionary War perspective, the initial need and desire for the founding members of this great country to pass the Fourth Amendment:

“to assure that Executive abuses of the power to search would not continue in our new nation.”

Quoting Justice Powell, in what may well be a direct instruction to President Bush;

The Fourth Amendment does not contemplate the executive officers of Government as neutral and disinterested magistrates. Their duty and responsibility are to enforce the laws, to investigate, and to prosecute. But those charged with this investigative and prosecutorial duty should not be the sole judges of when to utilize constitutionally sensitive means in pursuing their tasks. The historical judgment, which the fourth amendment accepts, is that unreviewed executive discretion may yield too readily to pressures to obtain incriminating evidence and overlooking potential invasions of privacy and protected speech. Judge Taylor then hands President Bush’ advisers an easy-to-explain, four word definition for the Fourth Amendment:
reasonableness in all searches’

As well as a simple explanation of why the Executive Powers do not exceed the Constitution:

“the wiretapping program… has undisputedly been implemented without regard to FISA and of course the more stringent requirements of Title III, and obviously in violation of the Fourth Amendment.
The President of the United States is himself created by that same Constitution.”

*SEPARATION OF POWERS*

Judge Taylor then has her Civics class move to the text known as the Federalist Papers.

the accumulation of all powers, legislative, executive and judiciary, in the same hands, whether of one, a few, or many, and whether hereditary, self-appointed, or elective, may justly be pronounced the very definition of tyranny.” Citing a historically important decision concerning executive power when the Supreme Court ruled that the Constitution did not authorize the President to seize steel mills, the Court examined Executive Power:
the powers of the President are not fixed, but fluctuate, depending upon their junctures with the actions of Congress.” The Court decision explains the Executive Power in reference to three views:

President acted pursuant to express or implied authorizations:
power at maximum-zenith.
President acted in absence of Congressional authorization:
zone of twilight reliant upon only his own independent powers.
President acts incompatible with express or implied will of Congress:
power at lowest ebb, can only rely on his own Constitutional Powers
minus any Constitutional Powers of Congress over the matter.
Concluding this aspect of the civics class, Judge Taylor holds thatin this case the President has acted, undisputedly, as FISA forbids” and therefore, the President is acting incompatibly with Congressional will, at the lowest end of his powers.

These secret authorization orders must , … fail. They violate the Separation of Powers ordained by the very Constitution of which this President is a creature.”

*AUTHORIZATION FOR USE OF MILITARY FORCE (AUMF)*


The Court then disabuses the Administration of the notion that the so called inherent powers exceed the US Constitution.

“Although many cases hold that the President’s power to obtain foreign intelligence information is vast, none suggest that he is immune from Constitutional requirements.”

Citing recent Supreme Court precedent regarding enemy combatants, Hamdi v. Rumsfed, the Court recognized the need for defense of our Country, but not at all costs, and certainly not at the cost of the rights and privileges created by the United States Constitution.

it is during our most challenging and uncertain moments that our Nation’s commitment to due process is most severely contested; and it is in those times that we must preserve our commitment at home to the principles for which we fight abroad.

Concluding this aspect of the civics lesson, the Court, perhaps tongue planted firmly in cheek, states

`the Constitution of the United Stated must be followed … all `inherent powers’ must derive from the Constitution.”

CONCLUSION

This decision is concluded with a quote from Justice Warren:

Implicit in the term “national defense’ is the notion of defending those values and ideas which set this Nation apart… It would indeed be ironic if, in the name of national defense, we would sanction the subversion of … those liberties … which makes the defense of the Nation worthwhile.”

Posted in Accountability, Big Telecom, Bush, Corruption, Neocon Criminals, ReTHUGlican, lrose | No Comments »

Joseph Nacchio: Crook or Hero?

Posted by buelahman on March 17, 2008

A quick bit from Wiki on Joseph Nacchio for background:

Joseph P. Nacchio (born June 22, 1949), in Brooklyn, New York, was chairman of the board and chief executive officer of Qwest Communications International from 1997 to 2002. He was convicted of 19 counts of insider tradingin Qwest stock on April 19, 2007.[1]On July 27 2007, Joseph Nacchio was sentenced to six years in federal prison. Federal Judge Edward Nottingham also ordered Nacchio to pay a $19 million fine and forfeit $52 million he gained in illegal stock sales. As of October 15, 2007 he was free on bail, appealing his conviction on the basis that the U.S. government retaliated against Qwest for his refusal to give customer data to the National Security Agency. [2]

Back when the Bush Admin began its illegal wire-tapping, they approached the bigger telephone companies and “asked” their permission and for their participation in the illegal activities. AT&T, Verizon, Bellsouth (and others) joined right in and made huge profits for being Bush’s partners-in-crime. But there were a few patriots who understood that it was against the law and stood up to the Hitleresque tyrant.

Amazingly, it wasn’t long before this man became a target of retaliation (so it appears and since everything else Bush does is illegal or for retribution, it must be the case now, as well) and was convicted of a crime, when the “crime” was still 9 months into the future. What is important to note is that he was a key figure at one time in government, with security clearance and the whole works (he probably knew full well that what they were asking for was illegal):

Nacchio joined Qwest in 1997 from AT&T[5].

While Chairman, Nacchio was serving on two federal advisory panels — the Network Reliability and Interoperability Council and the National Security Telecommunications Advisory Committee. He was Chairman of the latter and was given a top secret security clearance in the late 1990s.

Now, I don’t know if this man is a crook or not, but I do know that anything and everything Bush’s Admin does is subject to illegality (likely perpetrators, is more like it) or complete stupidity. In any event that can be dreamed up, any circumstance in his tenure and all I come up with is Massive Fail. So, it gives me some hope that justice may be real when I read something like this from the Wall Street Journal:

A federal appeals court has ordered a new trial for Joseph Nacchio, the former chief executive of Qwest Communications International Inc. who had been convicted on insider-trading charges.

The U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals based its decision on the improper exclusion of testimony by an expert witness but said the evidence against Mr. Nacchio “was sufficient for the government to try him again without violating the double jeopardy clause.” The court also ordered a new judge to preside over any new trial for Mr. Nacchio.

The appeals court had been pondering Mr. Nacchio’s case since Dec. 15.

In April Mr. Nacchio was found guilty on 19 counts of insider trading for selling $52 million of stock in the spring of 2001 while knowing that his company’s finances were in trouble. He was sentenced in July to six years in prison but has remained free on appeal.

Federal Judge Edward Nottingham invoked greed as a motivation for Mr. Nacchio’s actions, ordering him to pay a $19 million fine and to forfeit $52 million he gained in illegal stock sales.

Mr. Nacchio’s appeal argued that what he knew about the company’s finances when he sold stock wasn’t “material” information requiring disclosure to investors.

OK, so my 1st thought (and Google search) was who is this Federal Judge Edward Nottinghamand for goodness gracious sakes alive, what a bad, little naughty, nasty boy this Judge has been. Big Spender with the ladiesstrippers, it appears (altho his wife wasn’t such a stripper fan).

But “human frailties and foibles” be what they may, and the fact that I could care less if he is paying horses to strip for him, personally, I want to know what association this dude has with Bush, for when their is fire, there is a burning Bush.

Then, lo and behold, Abovethelaw.com has an archive page on this rascal who not only puts the “ho” in “your Honor”, but likes to threaten handicap people after he steals their handicap parking spot (what a total asshole… he must be kin to Bush):

Longtime readers will recall that Chief Judge Edward Nottingham (D. Colorado) is no longer eligible for our coveted Judge of the Day prize. After he threatened to call the U.S. Marshals service on a handicapped woman whose handicapped parking spot he stole, a few short months after it was revealed he dropped more than $3,000 at a strip club in two consecutive days — but couldn’t remember doing so, ’cause he was so darn drunk — we decided it wasn’t fair to the rest of the judiciary to leave him in the competition.

That call now appears prescient. From Denver 9 (via the Rocky Mountain News):

[T]he U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit is investigating Chief U.S. District Judge Edward Nottingham for the third time in the past year. He is being investigated for improper judicial conduct after his full name and personal cell phone number appeared on a list of clients from a Denver prostitution business.The business called Denver Players or Denver Sugar was shut down in January after IRS and Denver Police investigators served search warrants at the brothel on Fillmore Street.

First the prominent governor of a leading state, and now the chief federal judge in a major city. Are high-class call girls a growing trend in the upper echelons of the legal profession?

More details, including the judge’s highly appropriate nickname — no, not “Paulie Walnuts” — after the jump…

Now, I’m only on the second search result on Google and haven’t even begun to scratch the surface. So, click some more and find that virtually no one likes this guy and many thought he was a tyrant and dickhead (see, I told you he was Bush’s kin):

“One of the meanest, most imperial judges in the history of Colorado,” is how one lawyer described this judge in a March 14, 2008 column for The Westword.

For the last nearly twenty years, Edward W. Nottingham has been described by journalists as an “irascible,” “impatient,” “no-nonsense federal judge with a low tolerance for courtroom shenanigans, unprepared attorneys or unnecessary delays.”

He has been described by attorneys as caustic, vitriolic, callous, cantankerous, ill-tempered and disharmonious.  Characteristic of his denigrations of attorneys (as quoted from one example case) is, “You people are unbelievable,” his voice growing in volume, he adds, “What I’m dealing with here is a couple of children, and I’ll tell you that right to your face.”

As for pro se litigants, we’ll never know how he might have treated them, because they rarely have the “privilege” of their day in His Majesty’s court. (click here)…

But what about Republican or reTHUGlican connections (for they aren’t necessarily the same). Papa Bush annointedappointed him and he certainly is a republican and Thug, so you do the math… nevermind, I’ll do it. He is a reTHUGlican. This means that anything he does is suspect as illegal.

Then I realized when I visited dotcommonsense (as many of you already knew) that Elliot Spitzer was the prosecutor that brought down Nacchio, so WTF? There are too many intertwining connections in all of this and as I mentioned, they cannot be trusted for they are either evil maniacs or idiotic fools (neither is acceptable to me). Something is amiss, as they say.

Hmmm. Federal District Judge Also Caught in Investigation of Hooker Ring.

One or more of the reports linked here mentioned that Nottingham was appointed to the District court by George H.W Bush.  But other details emerge, and his behavior was so well documented and bled even into court that I don’t think this qualifies as balancing the secret investigation of Spitzer.

And finally (on the second page — aka disappeared) tells us that Nottingham is the judge that convicted Qwest CEO Joe Nacchio of insider trading last year.

Nacchio Nacchio where did I hear that name before?

Well, the CEO of Qwest was investigated in 2003 by New York Attorney General (you guessed it) Eliot Spitzer.

According to Rocky Mountain News report “

Spitzer became famous for his zealous attacks on Wall Street as New York’s attorney general. The cases ensnarled prominent Colorado executives and companies such as Nacchio, Qwest founder Phil Anschutz, Invesco and Janus.

Spitzer charged Nacchio and Anschutz with improperly profiting from hot initial public offering stocks in exchange for steering investment banking business to Salomon Bros.

They also add some additional links on the subject, but all this seems a bit too convenient for me.

If you must know more about the Colorado judge and Nacchio cases also read

Rocky Mountain News reports:

And

For more salicious details on Nottingham try the more mainstream Denver Post:

About Qwest being the only major telecommunications company to defy  NSA data request see USA Today report:

Posted in Big Money, Big Telecom, Bush, Corruption, Joseph Nacchio, Neocon Criminals, Qwest, Telecom Immunity | No Comments »