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Contact Info: Four Republicans Who Voted Against the Patriot Act
The Associated Press via Yahoo News ^ | December 16, 2005

Posted on 12/16/2005 10:58:09 AM PST by new yorker 77

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Larry Craig – Idaho

Phone: (202) 224-2752

Email: http://craig.senate.gov/email/

Website: http://craig.senate.gov/

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Chuck Hagel – Nebraska

Phone: (202) 224-4224

Email: http://hagel.senate.gov/index.cfm?FuseAction=Contact.Home

Website: http://hagel.senate.gov/

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Lisa Murkowski – Alaska

Phone: (202) 224-6665

Email: http://murkowski.senate.gov/contact.cfm

Website: http://murkowski.senate.gov

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John Sununu – New Hampshire

Phone: (202) 224-2841

Email: http://www.sununu.senate.gov/webform.html

Website: http://sununu.senate.gov/

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Frist also voted against it in order to keep the option open to hold another future cloture vote.


TOPICS: Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Alaska; US: Idaho; US: Nebraska; US: New Hampshire
KEYWORDS: 109th; gop; hagel; larrycraig; murkowski; patriotact; rollcall; sununu
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To: libertyman
"Nixon's use of the FBI against Vietnam War protestors....an excellent comparison. "

No, an accurate comparison would be to President Madison's spying on American citizens prior to the War of 1812.

But that would cause ranters like you who know nothing of the Constitution fits.

101 posted on 12/16/2005 1:18:11 PM PST by mrsmith
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To: new yorker 77
No. The ones who voted for it are the disgraceful ones.

If the federal government really cared about security, the southern border would be closed, and immigration would be tightly controlled at every entry point.

The Patriot Act isn't for fighting terrorism; it is for controlling citizens.

102 posted on 12/16/2005 1:18:25 PM PST by meadsjn
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To: Wuli
Your security is always the 1st & primary responsibility of any government."

Not hardly--protecting out God-given right to life, liberty, & the pursuit of happiness is the "1st & primary responsibility of government". I can secure MYSELF w/ a gun & a moral & armed populace, thank you very much.

103 posted on 12/16/2005 1:18:32 PM PST by libertyman ("....It's [the Constitution] just a g-ddamned piece of paper" --Presidebt Bush, Nov. '05)
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To: libertyman
...the Patriot Act worshippers are gonna come back again & again & again until they get their way...

I honestly don't think that they worship the Patriot Act so much as they worship Bush. Some kind of twisted "If Bush wants it, it must be good" kind of mental illness or something. They seem either unwilling or unable to actually read the PA.

I can understand their ignorance, to a point, since many of the changes to US law in the PA are merely changes of a word here, or a sentence there. You have to look up the law and see what the actual change was.

104 posted on 12/16/2005 1:18:58 PM PST by wyattearp (The best weapon to have in a gunfight is a shotgun - preferably from ambush.)
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To: Wuli
"How do you plan on (1)identifying, (2)tracking, (3)investigating terrorism in the abscence of some of the provisions of the Patriot Act?, provisions without which we would not have succeeded in some terrorism investigations in the past four years; we would be as blind as we were on 9/11."

The same way we did it all the years of the Cold War, with an enemy just as insidious. There is NO NEED for the "Patriot Act"--just the removal of the LIMITATIONS on intelligence activities passed after Vietnam by the anti-war Democrats, and especially those imposed by the administration of Billy Jeff the traitor.

"Where do you live? Maybe we can be sure that Al Queda knows how well proctected you think you will be without some of the Patriot Act provisions."

I live across Puget Sound from Tacoma--feel free to notify any Al Quaeda members you know.

105 posted on 12/16/2005 1:19:43 PM PST by Wonder Warthog (The Hog of Steel)
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To: mrsmith

Those were the words of Judge Andrew Napolitano, not mine....trash him if you want.


106 posted on 12/16/2005 1:20:03 PM PST by libertyman ("....It's [the Constitution] just a g-ddamned piece of paper" --Presidebt Bush, Nov. '05)
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To: coconutt2000

Agreed. Way too much power concentrated in the hands of the government. If Clintons used the IRS to go after critics what would they use the Patriot Act for...Certainly no good.

The problem is not the lack of weapons by the government, the problem is too many cover ups and incompetent leaders.


107 posted on 12/16/2005 1:20:07 PM PST by cmiller623 (Mayor Antonio Villa....or never mind. Los Angeles is doomed!)
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To: meadsjn
If the federal government really cared about security, the southern border would be closed, and immigration would be tightly controlled at every entry point.

Interestingly, the northern border is specifically mentioned in the Patriot Act, while any mention of the southern border is suspiciously absent.

108 posted on 12/16/2005 1:20:59 PM PST by wyattearp (The best weapon to have in a gunfight is a shotgun - preferably from ambush.)
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To: airborne
"the 'Gorelick Wall' automatically goes back up. "

Not all the way up. There was a ruling by the FISA court that the Gorelick "wall" was not an accurate reflection of the previous law.

109 posted on 12/16/2005 1:23:28 PM PST by mrsmith
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To: libertyman

So you are comparing civilian war protestors to Al Queda terrorists? Well I agree that even anti-war critics today have a congruence on preferred results with the Al Queda in Iraq, yet Napolitano is wrong, constitutionally, because the Al Queda terrorists do no become "domestic political opponents" just because they get a phony US visa and make cell phone calls from Boston and Florida. Technology and porous borders may allow foreign enemies to conduct their terrorism plans from our own soil, but they are still a "foreign threat" and when we track them from Jordan to Hamburg to Miami, the nature of who they are and what they represent, and what the law allows us to do, has not changed. Yes, when foreign enemies come here and we know they have come here we will "spy" on them, even here.


110 posted on 12/16/2005 1:25:14 PM PST by Wuli
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To: mrsmith

The thing that annoys me the most is that legislation is squashed due to the "House Organ" of the Democratic party..aka the NY Slimes.
With guys like Chucky Schmucky who look to the Headline for the days position this country is doomed.
PS-I hate Specter


111 posted on 12/16/2005 1:27:33 PM PST by JerseyDvl ("Patriotism is the last refuge of a scoundrel"-Samuel Johnson to the Dems of today.)
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To: Wonder Warthog
The same way we did it all the years of the Cold War, with an enemy just as insidious. There is NO NEED for the "Patriot Act"--just the removal of the LIMITATIONS on intelligence activities passed after Vietnam by the anti-war Democrats, and especially those imposed by the administration of Billy Jeff the traitor

Many forget also it was a Republican POTUS of that era's bad judgement which brought us the sudden rise in terrorist attacks. Take a bow Gerald R Ford for sparing the lives of foreign heads of state who support terrorism and a prohibition upon killing them for doing such.

112 posted on 12/16/2005 1:29:15 PM PST by cva66snipe
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To: Wuli

Then go to a judge & get a warrant for such spying....I have no problem w/ that for the most part.


113 posted on 12/16/2005 1:31:02 PM PST by libertyman ("....It's [the Constitution] just a g-ddamned piece of paper" --Presidebt Bush, Nov. '05)
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To: libertyman

Whoa. Only took seven posts for a rational POV. Personally, I'd rather be free than "protected".


114 posted on 12/16/2005 1:32:59 PM PST by Doohickey (If you choose not to decide, you still have made a choice...I will choose freewill.)
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To: John Filson

"When it's our turn on the right to question the American government in power, how would you like the PA used against you?"

Can you explain how this would be possible and what it would take to make it possible, and how it was not possible before the Patriot Act and only possible because of the Patriot Act.

I think you are dealing with myths about the Patriot Act, compared to what was legal before the Patriot Act.

Just because the borders represent one "real" security concern, which needs improvement does not make the prescence and activities of terrorists here any less of "real threat" and in need of specific means to enable us to deal with that threat specifically, in ways we do not approve for other threats and in ways which require checks on abuses of these means.

Like criminals, the terrorists will always thwart our "border" defenses, make their way here under legal and illegal means, hide among the population and yet remain an operational "foreign" orginating threat to our national security.

Hiding from those facts does not deal with them. The Patriot Act does.


115 posted on 12/16/2005 1:33:34 PM PST by Wuli
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To: JerseyDvl
"squashed due to the "House Organ" of the Democratic party"

The Dems know how to gin up and manipulate a frightened mob all right.

116 posted on 12/16/2005 1:38:25 PM PST by mrsmith
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To: mrsmith
I'd have to say the frightened mob are the ones so willing to trade liberty for perceived security.
117 posted on 12/16/2005 1:40:13 PM PST by rattrap
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To: libertyman

I go along with that.


118 posted on 12/16/2005 1:42:14 PM PST by wolfcreek
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To: rattrap
Of course, that makes you feel good.

If you want to think instead, tell me what Madison's spying says about the Constitutional powers of the President.

119 posted on 12/16/2005 1:43:17 PM PST by mrsmith
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To: mrsmith
If you want to think instead,

If you want to take your condescending remarks and stuff them where the sun don't shine I'll consider answering you.

120 posted on 12/16/2005 1:47:50 PM PST by rattrap
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