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IllegallyBlonde
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Name: Kelly Birthday: 11/8/1987 Gender: Female
Interests: Renaissance faires. acting. swing dance. writing. reading. art galleries. stage combat. archery. shopping. coffee. crème brûlée. Washington D.C. France. Shakespeare. the flute. the supernatural. music. laughing. arguing. politics. deep discussions. seizing life. Occupation: Artist Industry: Entertainment
Message: message meEmail: email me Website: visit my website AIM: ARoseInIce
Member Since:
5/3/2003
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| Warning -- Exceedingly lengthy and highly political post. Because I like you guys, so it's only fair.
This just in from the New York Times:
Judge Finds Wiretap Actions Violate the Law
"A federal judge ruled yesterday that the National Security Agency's program to wiretap the international communications of some Americans without a court warrant violated the Constitution, and she ordered it shut down.
"The ruling was the first judicial assessment of the Bush administration's arguments in defense of the surveillance program, which has provoked fierce legal and political debate since it was disclosed last December. But the issue is far from settled, with the Justice Department filing an immediate appeal and succeeding in allowing the wiretapping to continue for the time being.
"In a sweeping decision that drew on history, the constitutional separation of powers and the Bill of Rights, Judge Anna Diggs Taylor of United States District Court in Detroit rejected almost every administration argument.
"Judge Taylor ruled that the program violated both the Fourth Amendment and a 1978 law that requires warrants from a secret court for intelligence wiretaps involving people in the United States. She rejected the administration's repeated assertions that a 2001 Congressional authorization and the president's constitutional authority allowed the program.
"It was never the intent of the framers to give the president such unfettered control, particularly when his actions blatantly disregard the parameters clearly enumerated in the Bill of Rights," she wrote. "The three separate branches of government were developed as a check and balance for one another."
Love this woman. Love, love, love this woman.
"...said the decision was the work of a liberal judge advancing a partisan agenda."
Well the only way we'd ever get an unbiased view is if they had a judge who was not from either party rule, or some hapless, blessedly oblivious farming sod from Nebraska and neither the Republicans nor the Democrats have ever been very charitable toward the idea of Libertarian//Green//Independent members gaining a foothold. [Let alone clueless Nebraskan sods, which is in no way a reflection on the general character of anyone originating in said state.]
"...She has ruled for the A.C.L.U. in a lawsuit challenging religious displays on municipal property. But she has also struck down a Detroit ordinance favoring minority contractors. "Her reputation is for being a real by-the-books judge," said Evan H. Caminker, the dean of the University of Michigan Law School.
"...The White House is backing a plan, drafted by Senator Arlen Specter, Republican of Pennsylvania, with the blessing of President Bush, that would allow a secret court to review the legality of the operation."
Yeah, because secret courts are completely unbiased. Anne Boleyn was indicted by a relatively secret court. Look where that got her.
And I'm sorry, anything that's being referred to as the 'Specter legislation' is just creepy. Sure it's superficial. In keeping with the Tudor analogy, this time regarding Anne of Cleves, Henry divorced her just because she was a little aesthetically challenged. So we're good.
"Judge Taylor rejected the government's threshold argument that she should not hear the case at all because it concerned state secrets. Dismissal on those grounds was not required, she wrote, because the central facts in the case — the existence of the program, the lack of warrants and the focus on communications in which one party is in the United States — have been acknowledged by the government."
Tried their face.
"The president also violated the Constitution's separation of powers doctrines, Judge Taylor ruled. Neither a September 2001 Congressional authorization to use military force against Al Qaeda nor the president's inherent constitutional powers allow him to violate the 1978 law or the Fourth Amendment, she said."
Tried their mom's face.
"There are no hereditary kings in America and no powers not created by the Constitution," she wrote, rejecting what she called the administration's assertion that the president "has been granted the inherent power to violate not only the laws of the Congress but the First and Fourth Amendments of the Constitution itself."
Um, ouch? *Cringe* Somebody just got bitch-slapped in a federal ruling. That's too blatant for written judicial documents, in my opinion. "Hereditary kings" is random and not pertinent at all. White 'er out.
"It is disappointing that a judge would take it upon herself to disarm America during a time of war," said Representative Peter Hoekstra..."
CONFLICT. KAHN---FLIKT. You're in the Senate. You should know. Hell, I know this, and I only have one semestre of government class for reference.
"Judge Taylor did give the government a minor victory, rejecting on national security grounds a challenge to a separate surveillance program involving data mining. That ruling is consistent with recent decisions of federal courts in San Francisco and Chicago.
"Judges in those cases drew a distinction between the wiretapping program, which the administration has acknowledged and defended, and the data mining program, which has not been officially confirmed."
Eh, neither have those 'black spots' in Europe, so no worries. *Sarcasm*
And finally, to close, since a picture is worth a thousand words, the caption must total around 500:
"Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales said Thursday that the administration would do all it could to continue an eavesdropping program ruled unconstitutional by Judge Anna Diggs Taylor of federal court."
TOMORROW:: Coffee as a Health Drink. Your reward for actually reading this far. | | |
| So it would seem the literal shit has hit the proverbial fan.
Isreal is going to work on Lebanon in the own-your-face way.
And Iran is asserting its justifiable right to develop nuclear technologies. Which I fully support. I mean, really, they say they're going to use it for peaceful purposes, so why bother getting into a star-spangled snit about things until they violate that claim?? That's like paying interest on money you haven't yet borrowed.
Meanwhile, back on the ranch, I have uncovered an obsession with Hamlet's Ophelia, writing a poem thereof, and pre-Raphaelite artistry. | | |
| GAHHHHHHHH!
I found a DVD copy of my favourite movie ((EVER)) at Wal-Mart for $5.50. *Long, High-Pitched Squeal*
Dead Again: A story of murder, revenge, true love, and past lives ...To put it in the insanely Reader's-Digest form. I cry -- literally, bawling, cry -- every time I see this movie. Because it's just so beautiful. We need to have a movie night at my house and watch it.
And it looks like I'm going to reside in a dorm, instead of the ever-so-fabulous apartment. I've been doing a lot of thinking about that, and it just seems like the most logical, cheapest thing. Because if I'm leaving in two years to another dormitory anyway, it wouldn't make sense to set up complete house. And if I study abroad like I want to, that would be even more screwing over of the self.
So rawr. No mad-rad house-warming party. Boo. *Weeps* But it's for the best.
...Just remind me that this was my choice when my roommate turns out to be an aggressive butch-lesbian satanist and the asbestos starts speaking in tongues. O_O Egad!!
So yeah. Good day. Nothin' like Panera Bread-vintage-stores-free-concerts-and-espresso-beans-with-a//the-Vegan. Woohoo! | | |
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If the soccer team is any indication of the current state in Italy, I am SO marrying an Italian man.

{{They travel in black suits. Their captain’s name is Fabio. Granted, the ones with longer hair appear to own several shares of stock in hair gel, but that’s easily forgiven.}}

{{Mmmmmmmm. Does this make them eye caramella instead??}}

{{^^ Captain Fabio, debating how he will propose holy matrimony to me.}}

Me: "Not the faaaace!!"

Coach: "…And this is what happens when we mix whites with reds in the laundry!" Player: "Dude, that so wasn’t me."
LATER...
 "Whoever did this is gonna dieeeeee..."

{{Brokeback Appenines Mountains. Believe me, there are more game-action shots like that. It could have looked much, much worse.}}

{{Talk about hurting when you fall from heaven. I HAD TO SAY IT!!}}

"Okay, so maybe croquet wouldn’t have been that bad."

Me: "Skank, step back. They’re mine."

"…What? I’m stretching! ....Weirdo."

{{Unseemly amounts of sweat never looked so good.}}

{{Further proof in the power of soccer.}}


Coach: "Mussolini was an AMETEUR."

"So… When do you think they’ll find out about the laundry?"

"Uhhhhhh… Now. TOLD you we shouldn’t have separated ours out!!" | | |
| Does anyone have a "pre-customs" workbook for MTSU that I can swipe? In their infinite wisdom, the university decided to make all crucial PDF downloads incompatible with the basic Windows program.
Then again, what else should I expect? This is also the institution that took one phone call and three pissed-off visits before they'd approve my basic financial aid, and still sent out a letter saying I was screwed the day it all passed. So I'm not really expecting anything spectacular or even elementary from them. "Blessed are they who expect nothing, for you shall never be disappointed."
I will kill them all one day. Or at least thoroughly erode their self-esteem until every last one of them is but a shell of their former selves. | | |
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