SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Stockman Scott's Political Debate Porch -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: sylvester80 who wrote (31775)11/20/2003 12:37:35 PM
From: sylvester80  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
NEWS: Nevada groups call for statewide opposition to Patriot Act

rgj.com

ASSOCIATED PRESS
11/13/2003 10:47 pm

LAS VEGAS — A broad spectrum of activists rallied in Nevada on Thursday for a campaign to repeal the USA Patriot Act, citing what they said were federal threats to cherished American rights.

“Day by day, we’re finding more about how this can be abused,” American Civil Liberties Association of Nevada lawyer Allen Lichtenstein said in introducing “The Nevada Campaign to Defeat the Patriot Act.”

In Reno, Joe Edson of the Progressive Leadership Alliance of Nevada, called the measure “an assault on our liberty in the name of a false sense of security.”

About 50 people turned out at noon at the Reno federal courthouse, waving American and Nevada flags and signs that read “Don’t Tread on Me,” “Patriot Act Attacks Free Speech,” and one reading: “Dude, where’s my bill of rights?”

About 25 rallied simultaneously on the steps of the federal courthouse in downtown Las Vegas and a smaller group gathered at the Elko County Courthouse.

Organizers said they want Nevada cities and counties to join three states — Hawaii, Alaska and Vermont — and 210 communities that since January 2002 have passed resolutions calling for the act to be repealed. It expires in 2005, but Congress is considering extending it.

Justice Department spokeswoman Monica Goodling defended the Patriot Act, passed in the weeks after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, as “invaluable to defending America from terrorist attacks.”

“No court in America has found any provision of the Patriot Act to be in violation of the Constitution,” Goodling said by telephone from Washington, D.C. “And this Justice Department has made a very strong commitment to ensuring that we do absolutely nothing to violate the Constitution as we work to protect America.”

The act gives the government sweeping investigative powers, such as the ability to search people’s homes and delay notifying them, eavesdrop on computers and to track multiple phones with “roving wiretaps.”

James Tate, a Las Vegas representative of the Coalition to Prevent the Erosion of Human Rights, compared President Bush to Hitler and the U.S. government’s use of anti-terror measures to strong-arm laws in pre-World War II Germany.

“If we don’t put a stop to this now, it will be too late in a year or so,” Tate said.

State Assemblywoman Peggy Pierce, D-Las Vegas, demonstrated her opposition with representatives of groups in Las Vegas, including the conservative Nevada Eagle Forum, the Culinary Union, the Mexican American Political Association of Nevada and the Nevada Republican Liberty Caucus.

Groups represented in Reno ranged from the Reno Anti-War Coalition, Nevada Women’s Lobby, Latinos for Political Empowerment and Reno Gay Pride to the Nevada Library Association, Nevada Committee for Full Statehood and the John Birch Society.

Lichtenstein and others pointed to the FBI’s use of the Patriot Act to get administrative rather than grand jury approval to investigate a striptease club owner and politicians in a Las Vegas and San Diego corruption scandal.

They also cited reports of a bank using the act to ask homeowners association board members with check-writing authority to provide Social Security and driver’s license numbers and dates of birth.

“No one is safe under the Patriot Act. No one,” said Christopher Hansen, an anti-tax activist and government critic who has run as an independent for Nevada secretary of state.

“We hope that people all over the country will join us,” he said, “and stop using the excuse that if you aren’t doing anything wrong, you shouldn’t be worried.”



To: sylvester80 who wrote (31775)11/20/2003 6:50:33 PM
From: Karen Lawrence  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 89467
 
450 injured, 27 killed in worst terrorist attack in the Arab world...The chickens are coming home to roost in Bushland. We are seeing the repercussions of the evil he has unleashed upon the world. Suicide bombers kill 27 in attacks on British consulate, London-based bank in Istanbul

LOUIS MEIXLER, Associated Press Writers Thursday, November 20, 2003

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


(11-20) 15:05 PST ISTANBUL, Turkey (AP) --

Suspected al-Qaida suicide bombers blew up trucks packed with explosives at the British consulate and a London-based bank Thursday, killing at least 27 people and wounding nearly 450. The twin attacks coincided with President Bush's state visit to Britain.

The blasts, just minutes apart, were the worst terrorist bombings in this Muslim nation's history, and marked the second attacks in Turkey to be blamed on al-Qaida this week. On Saturday, bombers struck two Istanbul synagogues, killing 23 people.

Turkey's security forces were put on highest alert, and the army briefly deployed soldiers in the streets. Arab and other world leaders were swift to condemn the bombings in Turkey, NATO's only Muslim member and a close ally of the United States and Israel.

British Consul-General Roger Short and his personal assistant, Lisa Hallworth, were among the dead.

British Foreign Minister Jack Straw, who rushed to Istanbul, said he was aware of 13 deaths at the consulate, including one other Briton. Istanbul Gov. Muammer Guler put the total at 16.

"Once again we are reminded of the evil these terrorists pose to people everywhere and to our way of life," Prime Minister Tony Blair said in London, with President Bush by his side. "There must be no holding back, no compromise, no hesitation in confronting this menace."

Bush said the bombing showed "utter contempt for innocent life."

"The terrorists hope to intimidate, they hope to demoralize. They are not going to succeed," the president said.

U.S. and Turkish officials said the bombings bore the marks of an al-Qaida operation, with near-simultaneous timing and the use of fertilizer-based explosives.

The first pickup truck exploded outside the Turkish headquarters of HSBC, the world's second-largest bank, shearing off the white facade of the 18-story building and exposing the gray concrete beneath. Windows were blown out and scraps of white ceiling material dangled, caught on torn electrical wires swaying in the breeze.

About 10 minutes later, a second truck crashed through the gate of the British consulate five miles away in Beyoglu, a historic district popular with tourists. The vehicle looked like a food delivery truck with the explosives in large metal food containers, the Anatolia news agency reported.

The blast destroyed annexes to the main building and tore apart a wall surrounding the consulate's garden. Wounded people covered in dust and blood staggered away from the area. Two women stood outside the consulate crying and shouting for their relatives.

Shattered glass littered the area.

"Cars were flying, there was blood everywhere," said Mehmet Dag, a delivery man who was just 100 yards from the consulate.

The earlier explosion outside the bank was so strong it scattered body parts and bloodied pieces of charred metal across a four-line highway in front of the building and into a cemetery. A policeman went into the cemetery to collect body parts, including a charred, severed leg that he put inside a plastic bag.

Burned out cars, some with their doors blown open, sat in front of the bank building, located in the affluent Istanbul district of Levent. Some police wore surgical masks against the smoke and stench of burning wires.

An unidentified caller to Anatolia said al-Qaida and a small military Turkish group, the Islamic Great Eastern Raiders' Front, known as IBDA-C, jointly claimed responsibility for attacks.

Premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan, whose Islamic-rooted political party draws support from some Turks who oppose Turkey's close ties with the West, vowed to defeat the attackers, who struck during the Islamic holy month of Ramadan.

"Those who bloodied this holy day and massacred innocent people will account for it in both worlds," he said. "They will be damned until eternity."

Speaking to Blair, Erdogan also pledged to step up the fight against terror. "There is no faltering," Erdogan said, according to Anatolia. "We shall continue our fight against terrorism with more fervor."

Interior Minister Abdulkadir Aksu said at least 27 people were killed and 450 injured, adding the attacks were carried out by suicide bombers and were similar to the synagogue bombings, in which hundreds of pounds of fertilizer-based explosives were packed into trucks.

In Washington, Attorney General John Ashcroft said the attacks bore the marks of an al-Qaida operation. "They appear to be in the method of operation, or in the operational style, of al-Qaida or al-Qaida operatives or affiliates."

Almost 100 Turkish troops were deployed after the blast. At least a dozen, wearing helmets and camouflage uniforms and armed with G-3 assault rifles, stood by their jeeps near the HSBC headquarters. The troops later withdrew.

Such a deployment is sensitive in Turkey, where the military took power three times between 1960-80. The last coup came after years of street clashes between left wing and right-wing fighters left some 5,000 dead. The coup came at the height of the violence when some 20 people were being killed every day.

It was the highest single-day death toll from terrorism in Turkey since 1977, when gunmen opened fire on leftists celebrating May Day, killing 37.

Turkey's stock market started falling after the attacks and was closed minutes later after plummeting 7 percent. It will remain closed Friday. The central bank said it would act to prevent any fallout from the attack.

Turkey has been recovering from its worst recession in decades and there were fears that the attacks could cut into tourism and scare away foreign investors.

Several countries, including Britain, warned citizens to stay away from Turkey, and Europe's soccer authorities postponed international games in the country. Some Israeli tourists declined to board a plane destined for Turkish vacations.

The two suicide bombers who attacked the synagogues on Saturday were identified as Turks who the foreign minister said had visited Afghanistan. Al-Qaida and the Turkish IBDA-C also claimed responsibility for that blast.


www.sfgate.com