July 13, 2009 • Vol. 14, No. 40 Download Now! (pdf)

 

EDITORIAL
On Obama's Watch
by William Kristol

SCRAPBOOK
The 'Argentine Firecracker'

ARTICLES
Questioning Sotomayor
by Robert F. Nagel

Reversing Sotomayor
by Terry Eastland

A Good Niebuhr Policy
by Matthew Continetti

Tehran Needs to Stop Meddling
by Jonathan Schanzer & Howard Gumnitzky

What If Writing Were Like TV?
by P.J. O'Rourke

The Triumph of Crony Capitalism
by Fred Barnes

FEATURES
Bibi's Choice
by Peter Berkowitz

To Board or Not to Board?
by Jeremy Rabkin & Mario Loyola

BOOKS & ARTS
Rebel With a Cause
by John O'Sullivan

Seeing It Now
by Terry Teachout

Additional Splendor
by James Gardner

Touch of Evil
by Stephen F. Hayes

Sacha Kidder
by John Podhoretz

CASUAL
Michael and Me
by Jonathan V. Last

CORRESPONDENCE
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PARODY
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FISA Compromise

Andy McCarthy praises the FISA compromise that Congress has worked out:

Here is the bottom line: Our intelligence agencies will once again have authority to conduct aggressive monitoring of foreign powers, including terrorist organizations, which threaten the United States. In particular, this will be the case overseas — that is, when foreigners located outside our borders communicate with each other. The Central Intelligence Agency and the National Security Agency will essentially be able to collect foreign intelligence without interference from the courts, the status quo ante that was U.S. law for decades before being upset by a secret court ruling last year.

Moreover, the telecommunications companies which patriotically complied with administration requests for assistance in the emergency conditions that obtained after nearly 3,000 Americans were mass-murdered in the 9/11 attacks will receive retroactive immunity. That is, they will be relieved of the potential billions in liability they (and their shareholders and customers) faced in scores of lawsuits.

McCarthy notes the compromise isn't perfect: It requires a standard of "probable cause," which "has no place in national-security surveillance against foreign threats." Also, the compromise usurps executive authority by purporting "to make congressional statutes — i.e., the laws that impose judicial oversight — the 'exclusive means' by which electronic surveillance may be conducted."

But if Russ Feingold says the bill "is not a compromise; it is a capitulation," that's good enough for government work. Right?

UPDATE: In the House, the bill passes 293 to 129.

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