 KrisnatharokCaveat EmptorPremium join:2009-02-11 Earth Orbit kudos:7 | reply to antdude
Re: Cybersecurity bill fails in U.S. Senate Looks like congressional approval was unnecessary.
»www.washingtonpost.com/world/nat···ory.html -- If we lose this freedom of ours, history will record with the greatest astonishment, those who had the most to lose, did the least to prevent its happening. |
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 BlackbirdBuilt for SpeedPremium join:2005-01-14 Fort Wayne, IN kudos:3 Reviews:
·Frontier Communi..
| It makes one wonder why bother running things through Congress for passage... it's so much simpler just to have the chief executive (of either party) make up the rules as he goes along, just dictating them directly to the nation. And we all know what that form of government's called... quote: President Obama has signed a secret directive that effectively enables the military to act more aggressively to thwart cyberattacks on the nations web of government and private computer networks. ... The policy also lays out a process to vet any operations outside government and defense networks and ensure that U.S. citizens and foreign allies data and privacy are protected... ... Legislation to protect private networks from attack by setting security standards and promoting voluntary information sharing is pending on the Hill, and the White House is also is drafting an executive order along those lines. ...
-- The American Republic will endure until the day Congress discovers that it can bribe the public with the public's money. A. de Tocqueville |
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 | said by Blackbird:It makes one wonder why bother running things through Congress for passage... it's so much simpler just to have the chief executive (of either party) make up the rules as he goes along, just dictating them directly to the nation. And we all know what that form of government's called... quote: President Obama has signed a secret directive that effectively enables the military to act more aggressively to thwart cyberattacks on the nations web of government and private computer networks. ... The policy also lays out a process to vet any operations outside government and defense networks and ensure that U.S. citizens and foreign allies data and privacy are protected... ... Legislation to protect private networks from attack by setting security standards and promoting voluntary information sharing is pending on the Hill, and the White House is also is drafting an executive order along those lines. ...
+1
Many of these executive orders are unconstitutional.
Fans of the current administration are happy to overlook that fact, ignoring that by establishing this precedent future chief executives from the other party will surely use same. They'll cry then, of course, but it'll be too late. |
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 DataDocMy avatar looks like me, if I was 2D.Premium join:2000-05-14 Greenville, NC Reviews:
·Suddenlink
| reply to Krisnatharok Par for the course. -- Four more years of cronyism, payoffs, bad energy policy and 60's radicals being in charge. Thanks for ruining our country. |
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 rcdaileyDragoonflyPremium join:2005-03-29 Rialto, CA Reviews:
·RoadRunner Cable
| reply to goalieskates So long as Congress abdicates its responsibility under the Constitution, the President can do virtually anything he wants, even flaunting Supreme Court rulings. Andrew Jackson famously did this in relation to a ruling in favor of certan native Americans. -- It is easier for a camel to put on a bikini than an old man to thread a needle. |
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