olor=#BF0000]Would you trust, say, the NC Leg. and Gov. with these powers? Given the way the political pendulum swings is it hard to imagine D.C. one day being similar to it?[/color][/quote]Vrede wrote:Would you trust, say, the NC Leg. and Gov. with these powers? Given the way the political pendulum swings is it hard to imagine D.C. one day being similar to it?O Really wrote:Impressive list of eveel. And if all those events had the same causes,
:?: You asked somebody to, "trot out the parade of horribles of those falsely accused of something or misuse of power," and that's what I did. Why are you trying to redefine the terms of your own challenge now?
and if those causes were broadbased government repressive malfeasance,
They are examples of "broadbased government repressive malfeasance". You said nothing about "causes" (excuses) when you asked.
you might be frightening.
I grant that there is little reason for a comfortable lawyer that represent employers to be frightened. A younger or more political you might be.
But for purposes of getting me to join you at the baricades, you can't count anything that was illegal when it occurred; you can't count anything that was legal when it occurred just because you disagree with the law allowing it;
Sure I can, according to your original parameters. Plus, the fact that so much of the formerly illegal has now been made legal by Patriot, etc. doesn't make it any less a "misuse of power."
and you can't count anything that was long ago recognized as wrong, illegal or abusive and has subsequently been fixed to reduce the likelihood of re-occurrence. J. Edgar has left the building.
On what planet does enhanced snooping powers given to the same national security state that spawned the list you asked for equal a reduced likelihood of "wrong" and "abusive'? You can't count your wishful thinking and blind trust in Obama.
You also probably shouldn't attribute to malice what can easily be explained by incompetence.
Which of my examples do you feel were innocent incompetence rather than malice?
Good points all. And I didn't intentionally change the question parameters, I just clarified the factors important to my view. I'll try to condense. Undoubtedly, there have historically been people who abused the powers they had, who did (and do) illegal things, and who do things many citizens oppose. But this whole thread is titled "Big Brother is Watching You" and went from wneglia's IRS article to things largely related to the NSA phone records disclosures, etc. The fundamental approach of those most up in the air about that (including my friends in ACLU) is that "the government" is intentionally and maliciously out to get regular citizens and do something bad to them, or turn them into zombie slaves or something. I've never looked at it that way - even from the former "young activist." I considered Nixon the person (along with his henchmen) to be evil, but not the government as a whole. Exorcise him and move on. I don't think that most people with political power (elected or appointed) intentionally set out to harm the US, although some do. J. Edgar has been long gone for about 40 years, and I think the FBI has done more good than evil in that time. I think the government of the US and the Constitutional basis of it is stronger than any given President or bureaucrat.
Therefore, I'm quite happy to go to the barricades to get the current crop of scumbags out of Raleigh,and to try to get PATRIOT at least improved since they're never going to either repeal it or find it unconstitutional in toto. I'll work against Citizens United, and try to make an impact on gun legislation. And when a J. Edgar or Nixon is outed, I'll volunteer to tie their noose. But I don't find the government in general, nor the NSA, nor the IRS to be an actual enemy of the citizenry.