your postal mail or your email?cause do you really think they go through all your postal mail and then re-seal it all up so you don't notice its been tampered with?or maybe they just go through your email...they could do that in a rather undetectable waycourse i get dozens and dozens of emails every day, many of them spami don't know if the government goes through dozens of emails x millions of people every day
6/27/2006 1:28:46 PM
6/27/2006 1:30:25 PM
6/27/2006 1:32:08 PM
I'd rather not think in reactive terms but rather in proactive. Sure, the people that already exist in our country we probably can't do much about, but we can damn sure prevent any potential new ones from coming in. Set up a system to where any immigrants to this country will have to submit to being "watched" for X number of years (5? 10?). Sure that could be expensive, but are we really putting a dollar figure on life?I rather think that the two big natural buffers we have make it much easier to protect ourselves here with airtight processes/systems/regulations/controls and work faster than whatever we are trying to do in the middle east. We should have capitalized on the shock and awe and the worlds empathy (sympathy?) of having two buildings brought down to say "thats it, never again, we don't want to do it but we are errecting massive walls around the entire country to prevent people from crossing under cover of night into our land and hiding, and we are setting up extensive checks and restrictrive regulations on any potential new immigrants we let in". What respected world leader in their right mind in the weeks following 9/11 would have spoken out strongly against the US for attempting to protect ourselves through an open visible process (versus a guantanamo, nsa spying, using foreign lands to transport prisoners, etc).I don't have the answers and I don't pretend to have them, but proclaiming a never ending war on a rather hazy target without any kinda real measuring stick for what kind of potential damage this enemy could do is just not a good way to go about this. I'm just extremely uncomfortable in no one really attempting to quantify the likeihood of another attack. We know where we stand with Iran, we know where we stand with NK. If we can't figure out where we stand in regards to another terrorist attack, then chasing down records "reactively" means we are always following, playing catch up. We should be able to put ourself in a position first to say, alright, these are our defenses, we can be 99.99% certain that we won't suffer another major catastrophe. Once those systems and controls are in place, then we can start chipping away with programs (and I no longer claim SWIFT as one of them, rather the NSA) that might border on privacy violation or whatever, programs where the urgency isn't there as much and due process (fisa courts) delays aren't such a tactical killer.In re of proactive vs reactive, wasn't it known for many many years that hijacking a plane and turning it into a bomb was a real possibility? Why did it take 9/11 to get new security measures implemented when hijackings had happened before already? Why to this day 5 years later is it still pretty easy to blow up a subway if need be?
6/27/2006 1:57:56 PM
6/27/2006 2:00:37 PM
You're right I'm not joking. Until there is an organized group of born citizens (modern day americans) from within this country to plan and/or carry out an attack, I think it makes perfect sense to heavily scrutinize any outsider. Maybe "watching" them is a bit extreme, but the screening process should be beyond rigorous - full factorial. Anyway, I really don't see a problem with telling someone "we're sorry, but we don't trust you because we don't know you, and we're going to have to keep an eye on you for a few years until we have reason to believe you aren't playing for the other side".
6/27/2006 2:06:38 PM
6/27/2006 2:07:03 PM
6/27/2006 2:21:25 PM
6/27/2006 2:23:18 PM
6/27/2006 2:52:06 PM
^^ Sherpas.
6/27/2006 2:54:32 PM
6/27/2006 4:24:41 PM
6/27/2006 4:28:55 PM
all i was saying was that banning trucks from downtown nyc would be ridiculous. there are trucks all over the place. the first time i went to manhattan i was struck at how many more trucks there were than i expected.
6/27/2006 4:34:22 PM
I'm just saying if the country wanted to protect us from terrorist, there are probably much more appropriate ways then trying to enforce democracy onto some folks that didn't ask for it or spying on your own citizens, etc. Oh wait, we went over to Iraq to free them from a tyrant. Wait, it was WMDs right?
6/27/2006 4:44:06 PM
that post hurts my head to read. but i think i might kinda be on the same page as you.
6/27/2006 4:49:06 PM
Searching all the trucks that enter manhattan is the type of ideas that only people that have never been to manhattan will think of.
6/27/2006 4:51:43 PM
^^^not to get into an argument about why we went to war in Iraqbut Congress supported 19 different reasons, 2 of which were dethroning a tyrant and thinking he had WMDs
6/27/2006 5:21:44 PM
The number of reasons means nothing to me and you can probably combine several of those to make the number smaller (btw, a quick google of '19 reasons for iraq war' doesn't reveal obvious links, strange).As it is, terrorism, wmd's, him being a tyrant, and threats to our interest in the regions were the real biggies if I am not mistaken.And I personally think the terrorism one and the him being a tyrant one should be thrown out as the terrorism one is probably overstated (I don't submit to the "do you want another terrorist attack on our soil" fear tactic) and I don't think we have any business overthrowing tyrants across the globe.WMD's, well, thats been debated endlessly. And threats in the region? Why not just keep arming Israel if thats what it is really about.
6/27/2006 5:49:34 PM
6/27/2006 5:52:24 PM
I think I'd be a little more comfortable with nefarious programs if the people running them had been a lot more straightforward (and a lot less religiously motivated in their actions) in all their other dealings.That is, had the government done a bang up job handling Katrina, handling this, handling that, I'd be more than happy to overlook other less glamorous aspects of running and protecting the country. But when a certain person/group has a track record of botched jobs and mismanagement, I think they tend to get hammered on every little detail - it seems this happens to Bush.
6/27/2006 6:24:45 PM
still, regardless of what goes wrong, its easy to blame Bush...I could easily say that FEMA and local and state gulf governments did more wrong about Katrina...but Bush will ultimately take the blame
6/27/2006 6:40:34 PM
he, as the leader of the executive branch with sweeping emergency powers, COULD have taken drastic quick steps to help with Katrina, but did not until it was far too late.this is not to say that other entities didn't screw up a lot.
6/28/2006 8:40:21 AM
so, it's OK for a newspaper to print classified information, but it's not OK for a newspaper to print the name of a CIA agent with no real bearing to anything?got it
6/30/2006 6:26:11 PM
6/30/2006 6:28:22 PM
is that a self-portrait?
6/30/2006 6:39:09 PM
Thats your moms face.
6/30/2006 6:52:06 PM
wow, that's nice of you. It's a hell of a lot better looking than her real face
6/30/2006 7:04:18 PM