[The] request was rejected after several senior officials decidedthat the law creating the background check system did not permit the use of therecords to investigate individuals.
So let's get this straight. The FBI can now wiretap your house, read your e-mail,detain you indefinitely without telling you why, listen in while you consult yourlawyer, and -- last but not least -- try and convict you without theinconvenience of a jury. But it can't find out whether or not you bought aweapon?
The Times went on to note that the decision was "in keeping with AttorneyGeneral John Ashcroft's strong support of gun rights and his longstandingopposition to the government's use of background check records." The NRA will bepleased to hear that some of our rights are still safe.
See The New York Times, "Justice Dept. BarsUse of Gun Checks in Terror Inquiry"
November 29, 2001 -- Endorsing the Crusades?
In "Crusading They Went," (December 3, 2001) National Review columnistJohn Derbyshire unbelievably ponders:
Were the Crusades really such a brazen assault on the integrity ofthe Muslim world? Or were they what the fictional Roger de Bodeham believed themto be: pilgrimages, in which brave men selflessly took it upon themselves tobring the holy places of Christianity back under Christian rule?
Although Derbyshire doesn't cite all of his sources -- one of which was a fictional novel he read in his youth -- he quotes one "Gibbon" extensively. This is presumably Edward Gibbon, an English Enlightenment historian best known for his famous work The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (1776-1788). From Gibbon's outdated work, Derbyshire draws the following conclusion:
If we look behind the cruelty, treachery, and folly, and try todivine what the Crusaders actually said and thought, we see, dimly butunmistakably, the early flickering light of the modern West, with its ideals ofliberty, justice, andindividual worth.
See "CrusadingThey Went" in The National Review.
November 16, 2001 -- "Give Us Your Tired, Your Poor. . .Your Western Europeans"
"It's now nearly a million a year, five times the traditional numbers, mostly people from non-Western countries who don't share our respect for the rule of law and don't learn how to speak English."
-- Phyllis Schlafly on the perils of legal immigration, November 14, 2001
See "Finding terrorists inside the U.S." on Townhall.com.
Want torecommend an item for Hall of Shame? E-mail hallofshame@prospect.org. Please include your name, where you live, and the source of your information.
Recently in Hall of Shame:
November 9, 2001 -- A Shot In the Dark
October 15, 2001 -- Trial and Error
October 15, 2001 -- Hijack This
September 24, 2001 -- O'Beirne is No Hero
September 24, 2001 -- Profiles in Racism
September 14, 2001 -- Great Minds Think Alike
September 13, 2001 -- Fighting Fanaticism WithFanaticism
September 12, 2001 -- More Guns, Less Terrorism
September 9, 2001 -- FreeMarket Sharks
August 23, 2001 -- BushBioethicist Clones Himself
August 9, 2001 -- The"Firewall" Between KatherineHarris and Ethics
August 1, 2001 -- White HouseRigged Missile Test
July 30, 2001 -- U.S.Disses World
July 25, 2001 -- The NRAPresidency
July 7, 2001 -- Bushpromises to help the Salvation Army discriminate