Sherry Chandler » 2006 » January » 09
This paragraph from Daniel J. Solove seems to me the best succinct answer I’ve seen to the question of why it’s wrong for George W. Bush to have order secret surveillance of his own country by the NSA:
The issue of presidential power goes to the heart of what kind of nation we will be, what kind of government we want to have. Far too often, I’ve heard discussions of the NSA surveillance issue define the harm as a threat to civil liberties. While it is true that civil liberties are threatened, this isn’t the primary reason why the NSA surveillance is problematic. The NSA surveillance is problematic even if no civil liberties have been violated. The issue is about whether the President can engage in activities that contravene the laws of the nation. It is about whether we should allow the President to do so in secrecy, without any accountability to the people and without any oversight by the other branches of government. The Bush Administration’s theory of presidential power appears to have little articulable limit. In trotting out a theory of presidential power broad enough to encompass the NSA surveillance, the Administration has yet to state how that power is limited, if at all, under its theory.
I found this article through a post by Armando at The Daily Kos.
This post was written by sherry
Every now and then I look over and see my pile of pages from Ulysses and think I should get back to my altered book project. So far, I’ve done a whopping three pages, I think. Typical of my relationship with Ulysses. I never can make any progress with that book.
Someday I’ll do another page.
Meanwhile, I’ll recommend that you take a look at the Altered Books site, if you haven’t been there lately. The project gets more elaborate as it goes on, as the participants get into it I guess. I can’t hope to compete with that, for sure. Anyway, I think my interest will always lean more toward what language I can find through these altering techniques.
Geof Huth at dbqp recently featured Invisible Notes, where you can see the work of Peter Ciccariello, whom I think I would describe as a landscape poet.
Also, if you’d like to see some fine photos, some interesting visual poems, AND practice your French, take a look at L’Oeil Ouvert.
This post was written by sherry


