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Indi Guy

(3,992 posts)
Sat Sep 7, 2013, 09:58 PM Sep 2013

Obama Administration Had Restrictions on NSA Reversed in 2011...

Source: Washington Post



The Obama administration secretly won permission from a surveillance court in 2011 to reverse restrictions on the National Security Agency’s use of intercepted phone calls and e-mails, permitting the agency to search deliberately for Americans’ communications in its massive databases, according to interviews with government officials and recently declassified material.

In addition, the court extended the length of time that the NSA is allowed to retain intercepted U.S. communications from five years to six years — and more under special circumstances, according to the documents, which include a recently released 2011 opinion by U.S. District Judge John D. Bates, then chief judge of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court.

What had not been previously acknowledged is that the court in 2008 imposed an explicit ban — at the government’s request — on those kinds of searches, that officials in 2011 got the court to lift the bar and that the search authority has been used.

Together the permission to search and to keep data longer expanded the NSA’s authority in significant ways without public debate or any specific authority from Congress. The administration’s assurances rely on legalistic definitions of the term “target” that can be at odds with ordinary English usage. The enlarged authority is part of a fundamental shift in the government’s approach to surveillance: collecting first, and protecting Americans’ privacy later...


Read more: http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/obama-administration-had-restrictions-on-nsa-reversed-in-2011/2013/09/07/c26ef658-0fe5-11e3-85b6-d27422650fd5_story.html

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Obama Administration Had Restrictions on NSA Reversed in 2011... (Original Post) Indi Guy Sep 2013 OP
Yayyy!!! Javaman Sep 2013 #1
Yay indeed. Brewinblue Sep 2013 #19
Only someone with no clue about fascism would call this fascism ConservativeDemocrat Sep 2013 #29
OK, self professed conservative. Brewinblue Sep 2013 #45
Sure. Happy to do so. ConservativeDemocrat Sep 2013 #53
whatever ism this is questionseverything Sep 2013 #56
"NSA admits analysts purposefully violated citizens' privacy rights"... Indi Guy Sep 2013 #57
drip, drip, drip MNBrewer Sep 2013 #2
Who did we elect?????? newfie11 Sep 2013 #3
Best Con Man ever FreakinDJ Sep 2013 #7
It wasn't long after Obama took office, I began to have trouble processing what he was doing, or RC Sep 2013 #8
It took some time zipplewrath Sep 2013 #10
Next Time, I "Hope" We Pay Attention to Who the Advisers Are ... **During the Primary Campaign** HumansAndResources Sep 2013 #22
Doncha wish zipplewrath Sep 2013 #24
We also heard "But he was a COMMUNITY ORGANIZER!!" BuelahWitch Sep 2013 #60
My first alert came early when Obama gave the hat tip to approve retroactive immunity avaistheone1 Sep 2013 #37
This message was self-deleted by its author Awknid Sep 2013 #42
My first concern was when Obama flatly refused... Indi Guy Sep 2013 #44
Nader did this! NAAADER! (he's the whipping boy only because Henry Wallace is dead) MisterP Sep 2013 #4
+10 avaistheone1 Sep 2013 #38
Not really sure if I can believe this, TBH. eom AverageJoe90 Sep 2013 #5
Why on earth not? You need to realize who Obama really is. Divernan Sep 2013 #9
Change you can't believe in? - I understand how you feel but... Indi Guy Sep 2013 #13
Maybe....but something smells really off. AverageJoe90 Sep 2013 #18
That figures. That's just what I would expect from Obama. forestpath Sep 2013 #6
"Hope" you didn't think there'd really be "change!" villager Sep 2013 #11
Yes we can!! MsLeopard Sep 2013 #46
"Yes we could!" villager Sep 2013 #50
Another change... allows the agency to keep the e-mails of or concerning Americans for up to 6 years Catherina Sep 2013 #12
Who IS this clown I worked so hard to help elect? AzDar Sep 2013 #14
He's not a clown Yo_Mama Sep 2013 #27
Kicked and recommended. Uncle Joe Sep 2013 #15
K & R littlewolf Sep 2013 #16
This is all a Big Misunderstanding on the part of all you Obama haters. Jackpine Radical Sep 2013 #17
LOL jsr Sep 2013 #20
Yup zipplewrath Sep 2013 #25
+1. nt OnyxCollie Sep 2013 #26
Poe's law already applies to the lunatic non-Democratic left ConservativeDemocrat Sep 2013 #30
Who decides what is, “reasonably likely to yield foreign intelligence information”? Indi Guy Sep 2013 #31
You're an apologist for some dark stuff, conservative. DisgustipatedinCA Sep 2013 #48
LOL nt Mojorabbit Sep 2013 #59
Nice. n/t DirkGently Sep 2013 #21
If this were a Republican president Yo_Mama Sep 2013 #23
I wish they would hold off on these stories until Syria was less of a calamity. NOVA_Dem Sep 2013 #33
I think holding off on these stories is the worst thing to do Yo_Mama Sep 2013 #52
If this were a Republican president... Indi Guy Sep 2013 #39
Yes, I know it hurts Yo_Mama Sep 2013 #51
Bottom line -- We didn't put up with this kind of BS from Bush... Indi Guy Sep 2013 #54
This message was self-deleted by its author Awknid Sep 2013 #43
Scroll up to post #13 n/t Indi Guy Sep 2013 #58
Ain't it fokkin' GREAT having a Constitutional Scholar in the WH?!?? And one that calls himself kath Sep 2013 #28
Our so-called "constitutional scholar" strikes again! PSPS Sep 2013 #32
Maybe Jesse Ventura isn't far off in his new book... Indi Guy Sep 2013 #55
Campaign promises, 'Obama on Surveillance in 2007'... Indi Guy Sep 2013 #34
Hope And Change Officially In Flames cantbeserious Sep 2013 #41
Here's the perfect excuse for House Repubs to file impeachment charges. NoodleyAppendage Sep 2013 #35
Obama Administration SamKnause Sep 2013 #36
There It Is - Hope And Change In Flames - Obama - Deliberately Desecrating Of The 4th Amendment cantbeserious Sep 2013 #40
Hope. blkmusclmachine Sep 2013 #47
any of the msm covering this? questionseverything Sep 2013 #49

ConservativeDemocrat

(2,720 posts)
29. Only someone with no clue about fascism would call this fascism
Sun Sep 8, 2013, 12:37 AM
Sep 2013

Either that, or a serious political drama-queen.

- C.D. Proud Member of the Reality Based Community

Brewinblue

(392 posts)
45. OK, self professed conservative.
Sun Sep 8, 2013, 08:55 AM
Sep 2013

Tell us how different it is from fascism when you have a government, beholden to nothing but the interests of the bankers and the MIC, using secret courts and secret laws to secretly spy, without any actual oversight, on its own citizenry.

Tell us how that is just as the Founding Fathers intended.

ConservativeDemocrat

(2,720 posts)
53. Sure. Happy to do so.
Sun Sep 8, 2013, 03:20 PM
Sep 2013
Number of Deaths Caused by Fascism (in WW2 alone): 60+ million

Number of Deaths Caused by NSA Surveillance (both under Court Order and occasional errors they slapped down): 0


Even if I granted you your every dubious claim (even when it is directly contradicted by evidence), you still can't around the fact that wiretaps don't kill people. Doubly so when wiretaps are clearly subject to the NSA's extreme privacy rules, which are much akin to the IRS's.

Or do you want to outlaw the IRS as well, like the teabaggers you sound so very much like? They also Godwin in arguments as a substitute for actual facts. Indeed. All lunatics agree: Obama = Hitler! Fascism! All you need is a misspelled sign and a photoshop of a black guy with a short-cropped mustache.

- C.D. Proud Member of the Reality Based Community

questionseverything

(9,656 posts)
56. whatever ism this is
Sun Sep 8, 2013, 05:01 PM
Sep 2013

it is not Constitutional and that is what the current admin has sworn to protect,not

" Doubly so when wiretaps are clearly subject to the NSA's extreme privacy rules,'

not privacy rules from a secret courts whim that can be changed in secret with no citizen oversight

Indi Guy

(3,992 posts)
57. "NSA admits analysts purposefully violated citizens' privacy rights"...
Sun Sep 8, 2013, 06:22 PM
Sep 2013
National Security Agency officials deliberately overstepped their legal authority multiple times in the past decade, the agency acknowledged..."

http://thehill.com/blogs/hillicon-valley/technology/318515-nsa-admits-analysts-purposefully-violated-privacy-rights
 

RC

(25,592 posts)
8. It wasn't long after Obama took office, I began to have trouble processing what he was doing, or
Sat Sep 7, 2013, 10:26 PM
Sep 2013
rather, not doing.
Where was the reasonably Liberal, Constitutional scholar we elected? He went AWOL, replaced by a Republican clone.
I just could not wrap my head around someone, least of all this guy, who sounded so good right up to the {first}election. His actions after that, just flat out did not compute.
His defenders at all cost, came up with the umpteenth dimensional chess shit about then, to try to cover the obvious disconnect between reality and the BS we were being fed at the time.

zipplewrath

(16,646 posts)
10. It took some time
Reply to RC (Reply #8)
Sat Sep 7, 2013, 10:37 PM
Sep 2013

When he picked Rahm, I thought he just wanted his own attack dog, he still held the lease. I kept waiting for the job for Dean to appear. I thought Rick Warren was just a rookie mistake. When he kept Gates, I thought he was looking to use Gates to make the changes necessary. When he shut single payer out, I thought it was a strategy to take the heat off of the public option. It was somewhere around the time that he bailed on the public option that I began to realize we were in trouble. In hind sight, the signs were all around, and in fact Hillary saw them to some extent. There are people here who saw them early. I voted for him twice. I voted for Clinton twice. But it's been a real case of "lesser of two evils", with the emphasis on lesser.

 

HumansAndResources

(229 posts)
22. Next Time, I "Hope" We Pay Attention to Who the Advisers Are ... **During the Primary Campaign**
Sun Sep 8, 2013, 12:04 AM
Sep 2013

I tried this 'till I was blue in the face in 08, but all everyone heard were the pretty speeches. The "left" media funded by Billionaire's foundations and Oil Barons didn't talk about it - just me and the other "conspiracy theorists" who knew a thing or two about Zbig Brzezenski and Co.

Good people don't hang out at the American Baron War Criminals Clubhouse, the CFR, or travel with their founding members.

zipplewrath

(16,646 posts)
24. Doncha wish
Sun Sep 8, 2013, 12:17 AM
Sep 2013

I sometime wish we got to vote on positions like "majority" leader or Speaker of the House. You sorta wish we got to vote on AG, and Chief of Staff. Yeah, I know why it wouldn't work. The authors of the Constitution actually tried to figure out how the AG could be elected but could never figure out how to actually make it work. But we elect a president and literally hundreds of important positions are suddenly within a single persons control, and we have no say at all.

BuelahWitch

(9,083 posts)
60. We also heard "But he was a COMMUNITY ORGANIZER!!"
Sun Sep 8, 2013, 11:02 PM
Sep 2013

again and again. I guess he'll be organizing communities in The Hamptons when he leaves office?

 

avaistheone1

(14,626 posts)
37. My first alert came early when Obama gave the hat tip to approve retroactive immunity
Reply to RC (Reply #8)
Sun Sep 8, 2013, 03:15 AM
Sep 2013

to AT&T for spying on Americans.

Response to avaistheone1 (Reply #37)

Indi Guy

(3,992 posts)
44. My first concern was when Obama flatly refused...
Sun Sep 8, 2013, 08:54 AM
Sep 2013

...to hold anyone in the Bush regime accountable for anything whatsoever.

Divernan

(15,480 posts)
9. Why on earth not? You need to realize who Obama really is.
Sat Sep 7, 2013, 10:30 PM
Sep 2013

Can't blame this action on anyone but him! If you can't face ("believe&quot hard political realities, then DU is not the place for you.

Indi Guy

(3,992 posts)
13. Change you can't believe in? - I understand how you feel but...
Sat Sep 7, 2013, 10:49 PM
Sep 2013
...no president has really pulled the strings in DC since JFK; and look at the example that was made of him.
 

AverageJoe90

(10,745 posts)
18. Maybe....but something smells really off.
Sat Sep 7, 2013, 11:40 PM
Sep 2013

All of the research I've done suggests that while we're not out of the woods, Obama's actually done quite a bit to ensure MORE protections for those not currently being investigated for possible crimes, not less. And given how Karl Rove reacted when Obama won his last election.....well, this seems like it could be just another covert attempt to smear the president. And certainly, Dubya himself NEVER would have requested that the government restrict it's surveillance(and if this IS true, whoever did wasn't likely to be acting on his behalf).....unless, perhaps, it was part of an elaborate plan to screw over the next Democrat who won the White House, or some other scheme; though frankly, the former is more likely.

 

forestpath

(3,102 posts)
6. That figures. That's just what I would expect from Obama.
Sat Sep 7, 2013, 10:22 PM
Sep 2013

It doesn't seem as if there is anything the Obama administration wouldn't stoop to.

Catherina

(35,568 posts)
12. Another change... allows the agency to keep the e-mails of or concerning Americans for up to 6 years
Sat Sep 7, 2013, 10:40 PM
Sep 2013
Another change approved by Bates allows the agency to keep the e-mails of or concerning Americans for up to six years, with an extension possible for foreign intelligence or counterintelligence purposes. Because the retention period begins “from the expiration date” of the one-year surveillance period, the court effectively added up to one year of shelf life for the e-mails collected at the beginning of the period.

Yo_Mama

(8,303 posts)
27. He's not a clown
Sun Sep 8, 2013, 12:23 AM
Sep 2013

but he's not the person so many of us thought we were electing. We thought we were electing a constitutional law professor with a broader perspective, and instead we got a person who is somewhat Nixonian on these issues.

Not that President Obama is unique - this current wave of massive NSA surveillance began under Clinton, accelerated under Bush, and now is accelerating again under Obama. Three two-term presidents who have pissed upon the US Constitution in a startlingly coherent way.

The continuity here makes me think that the intelligence cohort persists administration after administration, and convinces presidents that they can deliver the goods. But I think they are failing, and throwing the constitutional baby out with the national security bathwater. However if you accept the basic proposition, one can see how this could happen. Each new incident is used to say "But if we only had THIS capability, we could take care of such problems!" And they always get what they ask for.

This could only have happened behind the scenes, and secrecy is essential to keep up this drive.

I believe the Obama administration deliberately allowed Snowden to escape - I don't think they could have permitted him to come back and be tried, because a jury might not have convicted, and they could not have allowed him to present a defense in court. The resulting legal battle would have been on the front pages for years.

Jackpine Radical

(45,274 posts)
17. This is all a Big Misunderstanding on the part of all you Obama haters.
Sat Sep 7, 2013, 11:38 PM
Sep 2013

You never liked him, admit it.

Pretty soon now the Pros will come & make Sense of it for you, and you's see you're arely on the Staircase to Heaven.

You think it would have been better if Romney had been elected?

(quietly waiting for Poe's Law to strike me dead.)

zipplewrath

(16,646 posts)
25. Yup
Sun Sep 8, 2013, 12:19 AM
Sep 2013

I expect several grey boxes and alot of blue links explaining how killing innocent people is the proper thing to do to prevent the killing of innocent people.

ConservativeDemocrat

(2,720 posts)
30. Poe's law already applies to the lunatic non-Democratic left
Sun Sep 8, 2013, 12:53 AM
Sep 2013

I mean seriously. There's already someone in this thread saying that the Obama administration representing its opinion before a court is "Fascism", and someone else responding to your post as if monitoring phone calls is killing innocent people.

How could I possibly parody that even further? Poe's law indeed.

Oh. From the article itself, The court said that: The queries must be “reasonably likely to yield foreign intelligence information.” And the results are subject to the NSA’s privacy rules.

So unless you've been sending money to foreign charities called "ThePeacefulBenevolenceAssociationAndKillAllTheJews", it's highly unlikely you've been spied on.

- C.D. Proud Member of the Reality Based Community

Indi Guy

(3,992 posts)
31. Who decides what is, “reasonably likely to yield foreign intelligence information”?
Sun Sep 8, 2013, 01:39 AM
Sep 2013

The NSA - right? And given that there's enough vagueness in that ruling to drive an AT&T truck through, there's nothing there to hold NSA's feet to the fire visa vi domestic spying. ...no teeth in the court's decision.

Will agencies inevitably use every bit of power that they're given? I think history clearly answers that question.

 

DisgustipatedinCA

(12,530 posts)
48. You're an apologist for some dark stuff, conservative.
Sun Sep 8, 2013, 12:16 PM
Sep 2013

Take what you're selling to someone gullible enough to swallow it.

Yo_Mama

(8,303 posts)
23. If this were a Republican president
Sun Sep 8, 2013, 12:09 AM
Sep 2013

we'd all be claiming that part of the motivation for the Syria proposal were to knock stories like this out of the mainstream press.

I knew Obama was a hawk before electing him, and I think McCain's performance recently shows why we didn't have a realistic choice - there were no doves in the race.

But it has come as a shock to me to find that Obama's public statements about surveillance were so at odds with his administration's acts, which have pushed the surveillance state ever onwards.

NOVA_Dem

(620 posts)
33. I wish they would hold off on these stories until Syria was less of a calamity.
Sun Sep 8, 2013, 01:52 AM
Sep 2013

These important issues are getting buried.

Yo_Mama

(8,303 posts)
52. I think holding off on these stories is the worst thing to do
Sun Sep 8, 2013, 01:21 PM
Sep 2013

There will always be another crisis. Always.

Indi Guy

(3,992 posts)
39. If this were a Republican president...
Sun Sep 8, 2013, 07:51 AM
Sep 2013

...we'd be calling for impeachment. ...Then we'd be pointing to potential hidden agenda.

Shocked? Yeah, me too. I believed him when he said (as I quoted in a subsequent post), "I will provide our intelligence and law enforcement agencies with the tools they need to track and take out the terrorists without undermining our Constitution and our freedom."

Yo_Mama

(8,303 posts)
51. Yes, I know it hurts
Sun Sep 8, 2013, 01:19 PM
Sep 2013

We're mostly all reeling around.

It's important not to let the hurt start talking. We have to back off and figure out the policies necessary, then campaign for them strongly without vitriol.

The bottom line is that for all of my lifetime, Republicans have not been big supporters of the Constitution. Thus if we lose the Democrats, we are in deep, deep shit. It's time to hit our congressional representatives hard and never let up.

Indi Guy

(3,992 posts)
54. Bottom line -- We didn't put up with this kind of BS from Bush...
Sun Sep 8, 2013, 03:21 PM
Sep 2013

...and no one should tolerate it from Obama. That's it -- period.

Response to Yo_Mama (Reply #23)

kath

(10,565 posts)
28. Ain't it fokkin' GREAT having a Constitutional Scholar in the WH?!?? And one that calls himself
Sun Sep 8, 2013, 12:24 AM
Sep 2013

A Democrat to boot??

WOO-HOO

Indi Guy

(3,992 posts)
55. Maybe Jesse Ventura isn't far off in his new book...
Sun Sep 8, 2013, 03:55 PM
Sep 2013
"DemoCRIPS and ReBLOODlicans"
No more gangs in government

Indi Guy

(3,992 posts)
34. Campaign promises, 'Obama on Surveillance in 2007'...
Sun Sep 8, 2013, 01:59 AM
Sep 2013
"This administration also puts forward a false choice between the liberties we cherish and the security we provide. I will provide our intelligence and law enforcement agencies with the tools they need to track and take out the terrorists without undermining our Constitution and our freedom. That means no more illegal wiretapping of American citizens. No more national security letters to spy on citizens who are not suspected of a crime. No more tracking citizens who do nothing more than protest a misguided war. No more ignoring the law when it is inconvenient. That is not who we are. And it is not what is necessary to defeat the terrorists. The FISA court works. The separation of powers works. Our Constitution works. We will again set an example for the world that the law is not subject to the whims of stubborn rulers, and that justice is not arbitrary.”

http://takingnote.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/06/06/no-comment-necessary-obama-on-surveillance-in-2007/?_r=0

NoodleyAppendage

(4,619 posts)
35. Here's the perfect excuse for House Repubs to file impeachment charges.
Sun Sep 8, 2013, 02:02 AM
Sep 2013

If subverting the Constitution doesn't fit the threshold, I don't know else would do.

SamKnause

(13,108 posts)
36. Obama Administration
Sun Sep 8, 2013, 02:02 AM
Sep 2013

Domestic War Propaganda is now legal in the U.S. !!!!

As of July 2013 War Propaganda is legal in the U.S.

Two laws were nullified by an amendment that was slipped into the NDAA bill; Smith/Mundt Act of 1948 and the Foreign Relations Act in 1987.

The MIC certainly didn't waste anytime implementing the new war mongering tool.

It seems there are many hidden agendas in this administration.

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