NYT editorial on Alberto Gonzales' testimony: headline of the day
telling it like it is... how refreshing...
one of these days, hopefully sooner rather than later, we will find out the full extent of the criminality that is being and has been perpetrated from 1600 pennsylvania avenue and we will be astonished at its depth and breadth... Submit To Propeller
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Editorial
Tap-Dancing as Fast as He Can
Published: July 20, 2006
This is how President Bush keeps his promise to deal with Congress in good faith on issues of national security and the balance of powers: He sends the attorney general to the Senate Judiciary Committee to stonewall, obfuscate and spin fairy tales.
Testifying on Tuesday after months of refusing to show up, Alberto Gonzales dodged questions about President Bush’s warrantless wiretapping operation. He refused to say whether it was the only time that Mr. Bush had chosen to ignore the 1978 law on electronic eavesdropping. In particular, he would not say whether it was true that the government had accumulated large amounts of data on Americans’ routine telephone calls. “The programs and activities you ask about, to the extent that they exist, would be highly classified,” Mr. Gonzales intoned.
Mr. Gonzales did answer when he was asked who had derailed a Justice Department investigation, requested by Congress, into Mr. Bush’s decision to authorize the National Security Agency to eavesdrop on phone calls and e-mail without a warrant. Mr. Gonzales said that Mr. Bush himself did it, by refusing to grant the needed security clearances to the lawyers involved.
one of these days, hopefully sooner rather than later, we will find out the full extent of the criminality that is being and has been perpetrated from 1600 pennsylvania avenue and we will be astonished at its depth and breadth... Submit To Propeller
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