  roc5955 Premium join:2005-11-26 Rosendale, NY
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| reply to Dogfather Re: So what
said by Dogfather :If you get bent over privacy so much, you better not deal with ANY bank, ANY telco, ANY credit reporting agency, ANY company as the vast majority sell far more important data than who you called. Believe me when I say that if I didn't have to deal with some of these companies, I wouldn't. As it is, I only deal with my local credit union for banking, and they have assured me that they do not sell their information. As a matter of fact, it's one of their policies. As far as the others are concerned, I do not have control over them, but if I could, I would sue them for every time I had to eat a cold dinner because one of their lackeys made a cold call. -- "Understanding is a three-edged sword." |
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  JakCrow
join:2001-12-06 Palo Alto, CA
| reply to Dogfather said by Dogfather :Defenders of freedom? Braaaaahhhhh ha ha ha ha! James Sokolove and John Edwards...the poster boys for why we need tort reform are defending freedom. Too funny. These scumbag ambulance chasing extortionists are a waste of skin. Can you give us a list of all the "ambulance chasing" cases that John Edwards "chased"? Thanks in advance. |
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  JakCrow
join:2001-12-06 Palo Alto, CA
| reply to Dogfather said by Dogfather :20 million. Bush an his Amnesty cronies put the number at 12 million because they want to give amnesty to all of them. Illegals don't respond to census questionaires. Independent studies by firms like Bear-Sterns » www.bearstearns.com/bscportal/pd···ound.pdf put the number at 20 million and that was a few years ago. It's only gone up since then. Sorry. The bearstern document says "may be as high as...". It does not state with any positive determination that it is so. You're simply using your own hysteria to fill in the numbers. |
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  JakCrow
join:2001-12-06 Palo Alto, CA
| reply to amigo_boy said by amigo_boy :said by JakCrow :If [2511] gave Bush and the AG the right to authorize warrantless wiretapping, then there would have been no reason for Gonzolas to make the claim that HJR114 gave Bush all the authorization needed to wiretap without a warrant. It's not amazing that the administration would use Joint Resolution 114 (authorizing the President to wage war on terror) as the source of their power *under existing law*. There's nothing in 2511 (or anywhere else, AFAIK) that defines when the AG can certify a warrant isn't necessary. Mark But neither is a good excuse. Bush broke the law by authorizing warrantless wiretapping, and all the excuses team players like you try to continue to use don't change the fact that he broke the law and violated the Constitution. I realize people, such as yourself, think that the team is more important than the good of the country, but still, that's not a good reason. |
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  KrK Heavy Artillery For The Little Guy Premium join:2000-01-17 Tulsa, OK
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| reply to Dogfather said by Dogfather :My mistake then. From what I read, this "immunity" was only protecting the telcos from civil liability and that it didn't grant actual immunity from criminal prosecution. No, it only provides immunity from civil trials. They could be prosecuted by the Government... However.... since the Government is complicient in the wiretapping, they aren't going to prosecute themselves if you see what I am saying. You won't see the Justice Department investigating and embarrassing the administration for example. -- "Regulatory capitalism is when companies invest in lawyers, lobbyists, and politicians, instead of plant, people, and customer service." - former FCC Chairman William Kennard (A real FCC Chairman, unlike the current Corporate Spokesperson in the job!) |
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  amigo_boy
join:2005-07-22 Tempe, AZ
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| reply to KrK said by KrK :If they are given immunity there never will be a criminal trial. The proposed immunity is only against civil liability, not criminal:
»rpc.senate.gov/_files/L43S2248FI···07ML.pdf
Mark |
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  Dogfather Premium join:2007-12-26 Laguna Hills, CA 3 edits | reply to KrK My mistake then. From what I read, this "immunity" was only protecting the telcos from civil liability and that it didn't grant actual immunity from criminal prosecution. |
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  KrK Heavy Artillery For The Little Guy Premium join:2000-01-17 Tulsa, OK
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| reply to Dogfather said by Dogfather :Let that come out in a criminal trial. If they are given immunity there never will be a criminal trial. I've debated that argument before with people. Since the Government would have to file charges to bring a criminal case, no criminal trial will occur. -- "Regulatory capitalism is when companies invest in lawyers, lobbyists, and politicians, instead of plant, people, and customer service." - former FCC Chairman William Kennard (A real FCC Chairman, unlike the current Corporate Spokesperson in the job!) |
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  Dogfather Premium join:2007-12-26 Laguna Hills, CA | reply to KrK Let that come out in a criminal trial. |
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  Dogfather Premium join:2007-12-26 Laguna Hills, CA 1 edit | reply to ross Defenders of freedom? Braaaaahhhhh ha ha ha ha!
James Sokolove and John Edwards...the poster boys for why we need tort reform are defending freedom.
Too funny. These scumbag ambulance chasing extortionists are a waste of skin. |
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  Dogfather Premium join:2007-12-26 Laguna Hills, CA
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1 edit | reply to JakCrow 20 million.
Bush an his Amnesty cronies put the number at 12 million because they want to give amnesty to all of them. Illegals don't respond to census questionaires.
Independent studies by firms like Bear-Sterns »www.bearstearns.com/bscportal/pd···ound.pdf put the number at 20 million and that was a few years ago. It's only gone up since then. |
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  KrK Heavy Artillery For The Little Guy Premium join:2000-01-17 Tulsa, OK | reply to Dogfather It's not the money.
It's being able to use the Courts so that full details of what occurred come out to the light of day.
If they get immunity, we'll never know what went on and how far it went. |
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  amigo_boy
join:2005-07-22 Tempe, AZ
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| reply to JakCrow said by JakCrow :If [2511] gave Bush and the AG the right to authorize warrantless wiretapping, then there would have been no reason for Gonzolas to make the claim that HJR114 gave Bush all the authorization needed to wiretap without a warrant. It's not amazing that the administration would use Joint Resolution 114 (authorizing the President to wage war on terror) as the source of their power *under existing law*. There's nothing in 2511 (or anywhere else, AFAIK) that defines when the AG can certify a warrant isn't necessary.
Mark |
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  amigo_boy
join:2005-07-22 Tempe, AZ
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| reply to Dogfather said by Dogfather :All these exceptions is how we end up with 20 million illegals crushing our infrastructure. OMG. You don't understand the immigration law. What I was referring to had nothing to do with 20 mil illegals (who are here largely due to reasons unrelated to immigration law). Immigration law can be extremely subjective for those who wait in line and try to follow the rules. And they don't have to prove that they're applying the law consistently (the reason I added "wink, wink, nudge, nudge.").
There appeared to lots of Muslims who had the law reapplied to them for the purpose of getting rid of them. Not Germans or Bolivians. Just Muslims.
So, it seemed a bit over the top to me that nobody suffered damages. If I were Muslim I'd feel damaged. (And, believe me, I'm not in love with Muslims.).
Mark |
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  JakCrow
join:2001-12-06 Palo Alto, CA
| reply to Dogfather said by Dogfather :If some Muslim (or anyone else) broke an immigration law, I don't care if it's a technical violation. If the violation calls for deportation, they should be deported. There should be no exceptions to the law. The problem is the gov't lets illegals get away with it for so long, it's de facto amnesty. All these exceptions is how we end up with 20 million illegals crushing our infrastructure. People wait in line for years and years and follow all the rules while jackasses are allow to just cross the border or over stay their Visas and nothing happens to them. IMO, anyone violating any immigration law is a bad apple and should be deported. That is what would happen to an American if say I was illegally working in Mexico. 12 million |
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 ross
join:2000-08-16
·Digizip
| reply to Dogfather said by Dogfather :Problem is the bucks the bloodsucking lawyers steal comes at the expense of the customers who were supposedly wronged. Corporations never pay for this crap...they just pass it on. We would look forward to a Bloodsucking Lawyer Payoff Recovery Fee. More valid, IMHO, than the so-called Regulatory Fee we pay already.
To cops, all lawyers are blood-sucking scum. To the rest of us, they are the defenders of freedom. |
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  Dogfather Premium join:2007-12-26 Laguna Hills, CA
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| reply to amigo_boy If some Muslim (or anyone else) broke an immigration law, I don't care if it's a technical violation. If the violation calls for deportation, they should be deported. There should be no exceptions to the law.
The problem is the gov't lets illegals get away with it for so long, it's de facto amnesty. All these exceptions is how we end up with 20 million illegals crushing our infrastructure. People wait in line for years and years and follow all the rules while jackasses are allow to just cross the border or over stay their Visas and nothing happens to them.
IMO, anyone violating any immigration law is a bad apple and should be deported. That is what would happen to an American if say I was illegally working in Mexico. |
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  JakCrow
join:2001-12-06 Palo Alto, CA
| reply to amigo_boy Actually, you're correct. However, 18 U.S.C. § 2511(2)(a)(ii)(B) is irrelevant, and as already stated, yet another excuse that people, such as yourself, have tried to trot out while running interference for the administration. If this gave Bush and the AG the right to authorize warrantless wiretapping, then there would have been no reason for Gonzolas to make the claim that HJR114 gave Bush all the authorization needed to wiretap without a warrant. Of course, that also ignores all the other excuses used by both the admin and people, such as yourself, while scrambling to cover Bush's ass and try and justify violations of both the FISA law and the Constitution. Of course, the hypocrisy of it all is that if it weren't for the fact the president has an R next to his name, people, such as yourself, would be calling for the president's head on a pole. |
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  tiger72 SexaT duorP Premium join:2001-03-28 Saint Louis, MO clubs:
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| reply to lesopp said by lesopp :Your assumption is that they are guilty, but what if the courts ultimately decide otherwise? They wouldn't be pushing so strenuously for an immunity bill if they didn't fear liability. They've already admitted that they participated because the White House asked them to (contradicting the law). If they don't get immunity, it's guaranteed that they'll face $billions in law suits.
Bad publicity and dirty laundery won't see the light of day when national security is invoked. It's already been invoked, yet fortunately our government is almost as inefficient at keeping anything secret as they are at wasting our tax money.
The telcos already got bad coverage last year with the small amount of evidence that was broadcast. Without immunity they can't stop the torrent of crap that they unleashed.
What if the president on his last day in office grants a pardon to all the telcos invloved. He can't, hence the immunity request. If the president could pardon an entire company, they wouldn't be wasting their money lobbying and and trying to save their asses. They'd just stick to the president, sit this out, and wait for the pardon. -- "What makes us omniscient? Have we a record of omniscience? ...If we can't persuade nations with comparable values of the merit of our cause, we'd better reexamine our reasoning." -United States Secretary of Defense (1961-1968) Robert S. McNamara |
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  amigo_boy
join:2005-07-22 Tempe, AZ
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2 edits | reply to Dogfather said by Dogfather :No one was damaged. I'm not in favor of the EFF et. al. civil suits because I don't believe it's about damages, it's about using civil courts to accomplish what they can't through normal (criminal) channels.
But, your assertion seems excessive. IIRC, shortly after 9/11 Muslim men were required to go to immigration offices, be interviewed by the FBI, etc. Many Muslims were deported over technical violations of immigration law (wink, wink, nudge, nudge). I'm not particularly fond of Islam (backwards rednecks who get far more "diversity sensitivity" due to western norms than they deserve). But, if I were one of those affected Muslim, I'd feel I'd been damaged (assuming telcos were used during that process of weeding out the bad apples).
Mark |
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