Monthly Archives: July 2008

Calling My Senator About FISA [Updated]

I called Senator Nelson's (D-Fl) office today to find out what his position was on the Dodd-Feingold-Leahy Amendment to FISA. (I used the great tool set up to help voters make these FISA calls as an experiment and it worked perfectly. Try it, it's free.) The amendment would remove the immunity provision from the bill, making it less bad in one respect, although still bad in others.

Only problem is, the two staff people I spoke to said they did not know how the Senator plans to vote. It seems strange to me that on a matter of such public interest neither the front-line staff nor the person who happened to be in the press office (not the actal press secretary) would know, but there you have it. Maybe Floridians have not been calling in droves. (This is your chance, guys.)

The staff were very charming, took my number, said they'd try to find out and would call me back.

Interestingly, saying I was a law professor got not a spark of reaction. But mentioning that I have a blog…that got their attention.

Update: I received the following email:

Nelson supports new intelligence-gathering legislation that enables the U.S. to get the information it needs to stop terrorist plots – as long as the final version contains protections for our civil liberties, such as requiring a court order before any American is targeted for eavesdropping.

Previously, in committee, he offered an amendment to deny telephone companies immunity for prior acts. That was defeated.

Subsequently, on the Senate floor, he offered an amendment to have the FISA court review requests for immunity. That amendment was defeated, too.

And, last week he co-sponsored an amendment that would allow the federal courts to determine whether the telephone companies acted in good faith and with reasonable belief that compliance with the government requests was lawful. The Senate has not acted on the amendment.

The current version of the legislation requires federal courts to review legal opinions that the telephone companies received from the government. Nelson will support that approach.

Mara Sloan
Press Assistant
United States Senator Bill Nelson (D-FL)
716 Hart Senate Office Building
Washington, D.C. 20510

Does that answer the question? And if so, is that a “no” or a “yes”?

Posted in Civil Liberties | 1 Comment

Dutch MEP Sues US To Release Her Airport Blacklist File

In How America is snooping on YOU … and may soon be snooping a whole lot more, “This is London” describes a lawsuit by Dutch Liberal MEP Sophie In’t Veld in which she seeks to find out why the US government keeps pulling her over for security searches at airports.

The article claims that this is the first lawsuit of its kind. Can that really be so?

Posted in Civil Liberties, Law: Right to Travel | 1 Comment

By Their Logos You Shall Know Them?

Where's My Jetpack?: Candidate Logo Comparison psychoanalyzes the Presidential candidates' logos.

I suppose that in this age of branding there might be something to it, odd as the idea seems.

(Thanks to la Bartow for the the link.)

Posted in Politics: US: 2008 Elections | 1 Comment

Enough to Make You Miss ‘Duck and Cover’

Feminist Law Professors says, Flying With a Young Child This Summer? Here's a Book To Buy.

cavity.jpg

I think it's a joke, but who knows these days.

Posted in Law: Right to Travel | Comments Off on Enough to Make You Miss ‘Duck and Cover’

Chess Column Deploys the Factual Defense

One of the most interesting things in today's NYT is the chess column. Yes, the chess column.

Have a look at Chess – Ranking System Is Questioned After a Wealthy Russian's Rise

[Russian Millionaire Vladimir] Afromeev is now 54 years old. Eight years ago, he was not close to being among the top 100 players in the world. He was not an active player, and there were no records in databases of his games.

But in 2001 he began playing regularly in invitation-only tournaments. And he began winning at an unbelievable pace, often by beating strong players with ease.

His sudden success — well after the age when most players start to decline — raised eyebrows, partly because he is a wealthy businessman who only plays in tournaments against handpicked fields.

The following game between Afromeev and Maxim Novikov, a Russian grandmaster, is from an invitation-only tournament held in Russia in June 2007. It is worthwhile to note that it is not very often that a strong player loses with White in only 20 moves, but it happened to Afromeev’s opponents more than once during that tournament.

There's a word that's never used in this very artfully written and carefully factual article. I suspect the hand of libel lawyers. If this were a chess move, I'd give it a “!”.

Posted in The Media | Comments Off on Chess Column Deploys the Factual Defense

Help Is On the Way

America's Finest News Source, Bush Tours America To Survey Damage Caused By His Presidency

Don't miss the map.

Posted in Politics: US: GW Bush Scandals | Comments Off on Help Is On the Way