HYPOCRISY: Mother Jones Writer Behind McConnell Bugging Railed Against Bush Wiretapping ...............................................................................................................................................
     
  The writer  who wrote the paragraph below took a bold stand against the  conversations of American Citizens being "listened in on," without their  knowledge or consent--even if it is being done because of    national security. 
  It's  not every day a former deputy attorney general testifies that the   White House violated the law--and did so knowingly. But that seemed to   happen this morning when former Deputy Attorney General James Comey   testified before the Senate judiciary committee about the once-secret   NSA warrantless wiretapping program that targeted citizens and residents  in the United States.Today, that same man, David Corn of Mother Jones published a    secretly (and possibly illegally) taped  conversation between a US Senator and his campaign operatives. That  Secretly taped conversation had nothing to do with national security  because as he has stated above listening in for national security---bad.  Listening in for political reasons---good!
   In August 2006 David Corn wrote i   n The Nation that Bush's wireless program for national security was an example of of his "view of expansive (even Supreme presidential power)
  For  months, George W. Bush, Dick Cheney and other administration aides have  been defending--even championing--what they call the "terrorist  surveillance program," under which the National Security Agency can  intercept communications that involve an American citizen or resident  without a warrant if one party to the communication is overseas and  suspected of being linked to anti-American terrorists). They have  maintained that the president has the authority as commander in chief to  authorize such surveillance. Though the Foreign Intelligence  Surveillance Act (FISA) generally forbids wiretapping without warrants,  the White House has contended that Bush is not bound by the limitations  of that law. This claim--arising from the Bush administration's view of  expansive (even supreme) presidential power--set up a constitutional  clash. And in the first round of the legal battle, Judge Taylor has  knocked out the White House argument. The audio tape released by Mr.  Corn today was really much ado about nothing.  Is anybody really  shocked that a political candidate will use an opponent's own public  statements about their mental illness and issues against them? How  Shocking. What we do learn from Corn today is that secretly taping  political conversations---very good, but secretly taping conversations  for national security---very, very bad.
   In the same 2006 article from The Nation Corn said this about a judge striking down Bush's wiretaps.
  Weeks  before he took office in 2001, Bush quipped, "If this were a  dictatorship, it'd be a heck of a lot easier, just so long as I'm the  dictator." Democracy, though, is not easy. And a commander in chief has  to abide by the rules, as various courts have now ruled. The  administration's King George approach to governance has taken another  blow. But it's royally unlikely this president is going to accept the  decision and give up his claim to the throne.  In September of 2012  David Corn obtained a secretly taped video (by Jimmy Carter's grandson)  of Mitt Romney talking to campaign contributors.  Corn and his  progressive cohorts were able to make great use of Romney telling  contributors that he didn't have to care about the 47% who don't pay  taxes.  Now Romney was talking about not having to care about trying to  get their votes but Corn used it to imply Romney wouldn't care about  them if he was president.
   That secret video was OK because it was only about politics, it had nothing to do with national security. 
    In September 2006 President Bush spoke to the UN General Assembly. In  his speech the president mentioned the Universal Declaration of Human   Rights, which was adopted by the UN in 1948. Writing in the Huffington  Post, Corn pointed out all the ways he believed that Bush was ignoring  that declaration    including: No  one shall be subjected to arbitrary interference with his privacy,  family, home or correspondence, nor to attacks upon his honour and  reputation. Everyone has the right to the protection of the law against  such interference or attacks. Bush keeps insisting on the right  to wiretap people--including American citizens (under certain  circumstances)--without a warrant, not even a secret warrant. As for the  right not to have one's honor and reputation assailed, the drafters of this declaration must have forgotten to put in a clause exempting the targets of political campaigns.You see---it's in his own words--Corn believes the UN forgot to put in a clause  exempting the targets of political campaigns.
    I have to apologize to Corn, he is not being a hypocrite...he is  executing the meaning of the UN Declaration of Human Rights you cannot  secretly tape people except when you want to slander them politically.   Well at least we now know his motivation. 
    yidwithlid.blogspot.com  
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