NoZed Avenger said:I am getting the impression that you are taking every post of mine as some sort of attack on your position, whereas I came into it thinking that we were going to have a conversation.
I merely asked a question...
You seemed to indicate or imply that Patriot II might be "snuck" through Congress as riders on other bills.
I pointed out that this was a possibility. And with such riders, they're often added at the last minute with little debate. If that's the route they end up taking, we need to make our position to our representatives known now.
On the other hand, if Patriot II never happens, it's no harm, no foul. At the very least our representatives will know we're against any such measure in the future.
My comments involved (1) Patriot I did not pass this way. That was not -- despite your denial -- an allegation that you said that it had passed that way, just a note in passing. If the original Patriot Act went through as legislation, I was wondering why you felt that Patriot II -- to the extent that it ever exists in future -- would be sent through Congress that way.
I didn't say that it would, merely that it could. Two different things.
Since "most really dangerous legislation" goes through on riders, as you have stated above, I was also curious what legislation you were thinking of.
Just look at any given bill. There's at least one rider that doesn't have anything to do with the bill there.
My favorite example is the 1998 Emergency Supplemental Appropriations bill (H.R. 1469), passed to appropriate funds to the relief of victims of the Red River flood, which (far from a complete list):
- Gave money to the DoD for operations in Bosnia,
- Provided for the collection of statistics from cheese manufacturers,
- Gave $3,000,000 to the Attorney General for use in countering threats of terrorism at the Olympic games in Utah,
- Protection for marine mammals trapped in fishing gear,
- Repairing or replacing concession utilities at Yosemete National Park,
- Settling a dispute with an Indian reservation,
- Permit the importation of polar bear parts from Canada,
- More unconstitutional and dangerous counterterrorism and drug law enforcement procedures, including more thorough searches at airports,
- Money to construct a courthouse in Montgomery, AL, a parking garage in Ashland, Kentucky, and other boondoggles,
- Amendments to the Truth in Lending Act forcing banks and other creditors to disclose financial activities to the government,
- $2 million for the establishment of a Law Enforcement Commission which requires states to share criminal records with the Federal government,
- Prohibiting studies on the medicinal use of marijuana
So, rider after rider after rider, more than a few of which are dangerous and scary. Add to that, the fact that the bill did not appropriate a single penny to help victims of the Red River flood!