Georgetown Students Protest Illegal Wiretaps Without Warrant

From the New York Times:
With polls showing the public evenly split about the eavesdropping program, Mr. Gonzales - like Mr. Bush and Vice President Cheney before him - told students at the Georgetown law center that he welcomed a "worthy debate" over the limits of presidential power.

More than two dozen students in the audience responded by turning their backs on him and standing stone-faced before live television cameras for the duration of Mr. Gonzales' half-hour speech. Five protesters donned black hoods and unfurled a banner, quoting Benjamin Franklin, that read: "Those who would sacrifice liberty for security deserve neither."



But critics of the N.S.A. program, who accused Mr. Bush of violating the Constitution and the 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act by authorizing wiretaps without warrants on international communications linked to Al Qaeda suspects, said they were unimpressed by the administration's public push.

David Cole, a Georgetown University law professor who took part in a panel discussion by both liberal critics and conservative supporters after Mr. Gonzales' speech, said that the program was "clearly" illegal in his view, and he attacked what he saw as a "blatantly political" attempt by the White House to establish a legal footing for the program.

Administration officials "can say over and over and over again that it's lawful - as if the American people will believe it if you say it often enough," Mr. Cole said.

The question of the N.S.A. operation's legality will probably be settled not in the court of public opinion but in a court of law.
Wiretapping the Last Straw for Bush?

Bush has broken so many laws in the last five years, there was bound to be a straw that would finally break his back, and it looks like we might finally have one in his illegal wiretapping of American citizens.

A new Zogby poll shows that a majority of Americans, albeit a slim one, agree with the following statement:
"If President Bush wiretapped American citizens without the approval of a judge, do you agree or disagree that Congress should consider holding him accountable through impeachment."
Former Vice President Al Gore had this to say in a speech today:
"What we do know about this pervasive wiretapping virtually compels the conclusion that the president of the United States has been breaking the law repeatedly and persistently."
And even Republican Senator Arlen Spector has called for hearings on the issue.

Whatever it takes, we have waited long enough ... Bush must go.