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In reply to the discussion: 'I Have Been to the Darkest Corners of Government, and What They Fear Is Light' [View all]merrily
(45,251 posts)174. In what respect, Vattel?
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'I Have Been to the Darkest Corners of Government, and What They Fear Is Light' [View all]
Octafish
May 2014
OP
Because it's very different. Also, the USG is both buying AND selling our info in the marketplace.
merrily
May 2014
#85
It was not intentional. In fact, I had edited my original version of that sentence
merrily
May 2014
#182
Yes, no and maybe. I stand by my statement, as it was phrased, in the context in which I made it.
merrily
Jun 2014
#215
Oh, I know...that's more what I was thinking when I first posted, actually.
BlancheSplanchnik
Jun 2014
#216
I agree that there is the left and then there is the left. (We need some new vocabulary words, but
merrily
May 2014
#105
Thanks..and if you go to the link he has news reports to back up all of his statements
KoKo
May 2014
#50
Is this some kind of federal holiday that the anti-Snowden crowd is taking off?
JDPriestly
Jun 2014
#203
Rather than protect the First Amendment, they attack the whistleblower and the reporter.
Octafish
May 2014
#69
Me too. I was going to say that sound you hear is the security-state apologists heads exploding. nt
silvershadow
May 2014
#77
How can anyone not get that he is a hero of epic proporations, with a fearless heart of justice?
DesertDiamond
May 2014
#9
And This Matters To You Why? - Seems Irrelevant To Others - Further Where Is The Proof?
cantbeserious
May 2014
#86
Yes - The Cognitive Dissonance In Left Leaning Authoritarians Is Surely Debilitating
cantbeserious
May 2014
#88
The left lionized Ellsberg for revealing info that happened to embarrass a Democratic President.
merrily
May 2014
#90
This *did* hit the fan during the Bush administration. Does nobody else remember 2005?
Recursion
May 2014
#92
Are you saying th left all supportive of Bush at that time? Is that your point about my post?
merrily
May 2014
#103
Congress can pass any law it wants, at which point the sanctioned activity is "legal"
Recursion
May 2014
#118
No, that is "merely wrong." Violations of the Constitution do not become legal when Congress
merrily
May 2014
#119
I had already answered your question. BTW, how many of my questions and point have you avoided
merrily
May 2014
#122
Well, now you've resorted to pretending I said things I never said. Know another word for that?
merrily
May 2014
#125
Do you mean the South China Morning Post? Is this the interview you're referencing?
merrily
May 2014
#108
Do you seriously think that China and Russia did not know which of their systems
JDPriestly
Jun 2014
#204
"That meant the NSA was secretly and indiscriminately collecting the telephone records
yodermon
May 2014
#15
The case cited by the poster does not dispose of the legality issue as to what is going on now.
merrily
May 2014
#134
The applicability of Smith v. Maryland to the NSA's blanket surveillance activities is questionable.
Maedhros
May 2014
#36
You do understand that the court is there literally for the purpose of interpreting the law... right
TroglodyteScholar
May 2014
#62
Trog, you are right. Case law can overturn statute law. Marbury v. Madison, 1803.
Manifestor_of_Light
May 2014
#67
Don't conflate a court interpreting a statute--which Congress can overrule by enacting a new law--
merrily
May 2014
#159
Nothing you say here is incorrect nor does it contradict what I said. So we agree!
Vattel
May 2014
#166
Google "Gov. George Wallace denied a Supreme Court decision was the law of the land."
merrily
May 2014
#158
The point is kind of pedantic, but even when a court does overturn an earlier decision
Vattel
May 2014
#180
Yes, it does. Unless and until Plessy was overturned, it was the law of the land.
merrily
May 2014
#185
You are quite right that in the case of common law, judges make law and and change law.
Vattel
May 2014
#189
Not in those exact words, but that was the implication, given that the subject was whether judges
merrily
May 2014
#198
So no spying? No wiretaps? No investigations? What a perfect world you must live in.
randome
May 2014
#21
Our Constitution is a contract entered into by representatives of the people of the US.
JDPriestly
May 2014
#29
The Social Security Administration does not compile and analyze your data with huge
JDPriestly
May 2014
#60
If the laws need to be updated, I don't have a problem with that. Why would I?
randome
May 2014
#104
A couple of other whistleblowers tried to warn us without bringing out the huge array of
JDPriestly
May 2014
#172
Which still avoids answering, let alone, asking, the question of whom the NSA monitors.
randome
May 2014
#96
Exactly. It's modified legally only by amendment. Let someone put a modification to a vote.
merrily
May 2014
#137
'Allies' as in liberal thinkers of DU. Not 'allies' as in international espionage.
randome
May 2014
#161
No they'll never end spying, its been going on since mankind first days
LiberalLovinLug
May 2014
#191
How is it that you know the answer as to whether the NSA's actions are directed at American
JDPriestly
May 2014
#53
And was this info from the NSA provided as a consequence of international monitoring?
randome
May 2014
#100
Well, at least bringing up that point out of nowhere spared you from the Constitutional issues.
merrily
May 2014
#107
The NSA was not supposed to turn its powers on the citizens of the United States.
Octafish
May 2014
#24
Yes. I know about Gehlen. I will have to read Blowback. Somehow I missed it. Thanks.
JDPriestly
May 2014
#75
+10000 I wish I could rec this post. It should be on the top of every forum.
woo me with science
May 2014
#169