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A New Era Of Stupidity



 
 
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  #1  
Old June 8th 05, 01:49 PM
bicycle
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Default A New Era Of Stupidity

Charlie Nudo has a message in his group welcoming me as a member to
his GAY group. Since I never emailed him asking to be a member, then we
know that the other 26 "members" are fake as well. How stupid. Also
notice there is not one post in his group from any of the other
members. That's because they do not exist. Poor Noodles has to invent
members for his GAY group because no one wants to post in a forum run
by a psycho.

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  #2  
Old June 8th 05, 01:51 PM
trippingtoo8track
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welcome aboard, bicycle !

  #3  
Old June 8th 05, 01:54 PM
bicycle
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Default



trippingtoo8track wrote:
welcome aboard, bicycle !


I'm watching Charlie Nudo melt down!

  #4  
Old June 8th 05, 02:07 PM
tripping28track
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Default

..

  #5  
Old June 8th 05, 08:20 PM
DeserTBoB
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On 8 Jun 2005 05:51:59 -0700, "trippingtoo8track"
wrote:

welcome aboard, bicycle ! snip


Adding people to groups without their permission is grounds for having
your "goo goo groopz" terminated.

  #6  
Old June 9th 05, 01:28 AM
8 track that smells-heil Hitler foreign scumbag
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Senate Gives FBI More Patriot Act Power


Jun 7, 10:59 PM (ET)


By LAURIE KELLMAN


WASHINGTON (AP) - The FBI would get expanded powers to subpoena records

without the approval of a judge or grand jury in terrorism
investigations under Patriot Act revisions approved Tuesday by the
Senate Intelligence Committee.


Some senators who voted 11-4 to move the bill forward said they would
push for limits on the new powers the measure would grant to law
enforcement agencies.


"This bill must be amended on the floor to protect national security
while protecting Constitutional rights," said Sen. Barbara Mikulski,
D-Md.


Ranking Democrat Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va., supported the bill overall
but said he would push for limits that would allow such administrative
subpoenas "only if immediacy dictates."


Rockefeller and other committee members, such as Sen. Dianne Feinstein,

D-Calif., also are concerned that the bill would grant powers to
federal law enforcement agencies that could be used in criminal
inquiries rather than intelligence-gathering ones.


Committee Chairman Pat Roberts, R-Kan., said the bill places new checks

and balances on the powers it would grant, such as new procedures that
would allow people to challenge such administrative orders. He called
the Patriot Act "a vital tool in the war on terror" and lauded the
Democrats who voted for it in spite of misgivings.


Portions of the Patriot Act - signed into law six weeks after the Sept.

11 attacks - are set to expire at the end of 2005. The bill would renew

and expand the act.


The bill also must be considered by the Senate Judiciary Committee,
where Feinstein and other Democrats planned to again offer amendments.


Overall, Rockefeller said, the committee gave a nod to most of the
Patriot Act in its first few years fighting the nation's new enemies.


"We concluded that these tools have helped keep America safe ... and
should be made permanent," Rockefeller said in a statement.


Still, civil libertarians panned the bill and the closed-door meetings
in which it was written.


"When lawmakers seek to rewrite our Fourth Amendment rights, they
should at least have the gumption to do so in public," said Lisa
Graves, the ACLU's senior counsel for legislative strategy. "Americans
have a reasonable expectation that their federal government will not
gather records about their health, their wealth and the transactions of

their daily life without probable cause of a crime and without a court
order."


Reply




Sid9 Jun 8, 7:47 pm show options

Newsgroups: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.impeach.bush, alt.politics,
alt.politics.democrats.d, alt.politics.liberalism
From: "Sid9" - Find messages by this author
Date: Wed, 8 Jun 2005 19:47:10 -0400
Local: Wed,Jun 8 2005 7:47 pm
Subject: More Good News From The Bush Administration
Reply | Reply to Author | Forward | Print | Individual Message | Show
original | Report Abuse

AND...bad news for Americans:


"


When lawmakers seek to rewrite our Fourth Amendment rights, they
should at least have the gumption to do so in public," said Lisa
Graves, the ACLU's senior counsel for legislative strategy. "Americans
have a reasonable expectation that their federal government will not
gather records about their health, their wealth and the transactions of

their daily life without probable cause of a crime and without a court
order

 




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