We Misunderstood Barack: He only wanted the Domestic Surveillance to
be Made Legal, not to End It

Posted: 08 Jun 2013 07:21 AM PDT

 We misunderstood Barack Obama years ago when he slammed the Bush
administration for arbitrary intrusion in the privacy of citizens,

 in the name of the war on terrorism. No more illegal wiretapping of
American citizens, he promised. But note that he didn’t say ‘no more
wiretapping.’

Apparently Obama only meant that he would pass laws and issue
presidential decrees that allowed the government to violate civil
liberties, so that the vast domestic surveillance was legal, in
contrast to its illicit character under Bush. It isn’t the
surveillance that he was promising to curtail.

That’s what I take away from his defense  of the surveillance on Friday.

He also was being dishonest in saying that no one is listening to our
phone calls. He wasn’t accused of listening to our phone calls. He was
accused of monitoring who we call, without a warrant, which is private
information as he well knows. When you deny the charge that hasn’t
been made and ignore the one that was, you are in Donald Rumsfeld
territory. It is a sad thing to see this happen to Barry.
-- 
Jim Devine /  "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your
own way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
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