Of
course freedom of the press requires that the members of the press see
themselves as watchdogs, not lapdogs.
When asked by reporters whether she favors curbs on the Internet, which
has played a key role in
breaking the news about the president's
scandals, Hillary Rodham Clinton ominously replied: ''We
are all going to have to rethink
how we deal with this, because there are all these competing values.''
According to a Reuters dispatch,
she went on to deplore the fact that the Internet lacks ''any kind of
editing function or gatekeeping
function.''
"We can't be so fixated on
our desire to preserve the rights of ordinary Americans ."
--William J. Clinton, USA Today,
March 11, 1993
"A cultist
is one who has a strong belief in the Bible and the
Second
Coming of Christ; who frequently attends Bible Studies;
who has
a high level of financial giving to a Christian cause; who
{
Congress shall make no law
respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise
... }
home schools
for their children; who has accumulated survival
foods
and has a strong belief in the Second Amendment; and who
distrusts
big government {to
petition the Government for a redress of grievances.}
. Any of those may qualify a person
as
a cultist
{or
the right of the people peaceably to
assemble...}
but certainly more than one would cause us to strongly look
at this
person as a threat, and his family as being in a risk situation
that qualified
for government interference. Waco was one of those
situations
that qualified under our definition of people being at risk
that necessitates
government action to save them."
{Congress shall make no law...}
U.S. Attorney General, Janet Reno
during a 60 Minutes interview
I really struggled about putting this flag here, but hey, if the swastika fits wear it!