I don't know about the latter Jeff. I think law enforcement, in general, has more than enough authority. The bigger question is when to release the hounds. The fact that 9 out of 10 persons on the terror list were able to purchase a firearm is very telling. The background checks are obviously insufficient. They check for mental incarceration, felony conviction, and record of domestic abuse. That list obviously needs to be expanded. But how far? Part of the problem is how all parties involved are oh-so-worried about liability and legal technicalities. The net cast is awfully wide. You can't use the terror watchlist as a threshhold for not buying weapons. Did you know there are 1.5 million Americans on the terror watchlist? You really think there 1.5M potential terrorists in this country? One out for every 200 people is potentially willing to strap a bomb on their person and find a shopping center?
Part of the problem is the gov't obsession with secrecy. "Oh we can't tell you what will get you on the watch list/no fly list/whatever else list because then you'll know how to avoid it." Bullshit. Thats Stalin's attitude of better to execute 10 innocent people than let one guilty person escape. We need civilian oversight committee of gov't terror agencies. The voting booth simply installs gov't idiots, it doesn't oversee them. The Department of Homeland Stupidity is a prime example of how ineffectively our gov't struggles with security. But to Bush's credit, when the economy needed a boost, it was the largest make-work employment program since the New Deal.
Part of the problem is the gov't obsession with secrecy. "Oh we can't tell you what will get you on the watch list/no fly list/whatever else list because then you'll know how to avoid it." Bullshit. Thats Stalin's attitude of better to execute 10 innocent people than let one guilty person escape. We need civilian oversight committee of gov't terror agencies. The voting booth simply installs gov't idiots, it doesn't oversee them. The Department of Homeland Stupidity is a prime example of how ineffectively our gov't struggles with security. But to Bush's credit, when the economy needed a boost, it was the largest make-work employment program since the New Deal.
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