The Bush administration's continuing insistence that it is above the law
Taking a leak
Kn@ppster
by Thomas L. Knapp
01/04/06
The disclosure of the program's existence and its criminal nature did not damage the national security; it only damaged the president's reputation. It did not endanger the United States; it only endangered the president's ability to continue committing crimes with impunity. If there's any parallel between the Plame case and this one, that parallel is to be found in the Bush administration's continuing insistence that it is above the law. To their everlasting shame, Malkin and friends' political raison d'etre seems to have become defending that insistence at all costs...
http://knappster.blogspot.com/2006/01/taking-leak.html
Kn@ppster
by Thomas L. Knapp
01/04/06
The disclosure of the program's existence and its criminal nature did not damage the national security; it only damaged the president's reputation. It did not endanger the United States; it only endangered the president's ability to continue committing crimes with impunity. If there's any parallel between the Plame case and this one, that parallel is to be found in the Bush administration's continuing insistence that it is above the law. To their everlasting shame, Malkin and friends' political raison d'etre seems to have become defending that insistence at all costs...
http://knappster.blogspot.com/2006/01/taking-leak.html
Starmail - 5. Jan, 17:58