Gitmo 'Justice' for US Citizens?
A conservative-dominated U.S. Appeals Court has opened the door for President George W. Bush or a successor to throw American citizens - as well as non-citizens - into a legal black hole by designating them "enemy combatants," even if they have engaged in no violent act and are living on U.S. soil.
The federal Appeals Court in Richmond, Virginia, ruled 5-4 on July 15 that Bush had the right, while prosecuting the "war on terror," to hold Qatari citizen (and Peoria, Illinois, resident) Ali al-Marri indefinitely as an "enemy combatant."
But some of the court's more liberal judges expressed alarm, saying the legal reasoning that denied al-Marri meaningful due process not only trampled on American legal traditions but could be used to lock up U.S. citizens as well.
"For over two centuries of growth and struggle, peace and war, the Constitution has secured our freedom through the guarantee that, in the United States, no one will be deprived of liberty without due process of law," wrote Judge Diana Motz, a Bill Clinton appointee, who dissented against the court's approval of sweeping presidential powers.
Motz noted that al-Marri has been imprisoned for more than five years, "without acknowledgement of the protection afforded by the Constitution, solely because the Executive believes that his indefinite military detention - or even the indefinite military detention of a similarly situated American citizen - is proper."
Al-Marri's lawyers plan to appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court, and the case underscores one of the biggest issues at stake in the November elections: whether Republican John McCain will get to fulfill his promise to appoint more Supreme Court judges like Samuel Alito and John Roberts, who have embraced Bush's vision of an all-powerful President.
Currently, the U.S. Supreme Court has a slim 5-4 majority in favor of limiting Bush's authority to deny basic constitutional rights to people designated "enemy combatants," but the replacement of one member of the majority with another Alito or Roberts would tip the balance and effectively permit the rewriting of the U.S. Constitution.
Though the July 15 ruling was convoluted and did call for a federal District Court to afford al-Marri some more rights, the Appeals Court decision effectively upheld Bush's assertion of nearly unlimited power to have people detained as "enemy combatants."
The ruling suggested that even American citizens - if they are deemed "enemy combatants" - could be subjected to Bush's military commissions, where truncated legal rights make proving a person's guilt much easier than in civilian courts.
Stunned Realization
Previously, the New York Times editorial page and some liberal legal experts had criticized Bush's high-handed approach toward non-citizens, but had assured Americans that the military commissions would not apply to them.
But at Consortiumnews.com, we noted that language buried in the Military Commissions Act of 2006 seemed to cover - indeed even target - U.S. citizens. [See "Who Is 'Any Person' in Tribunal Law?" or our book, Neck Deep.]
For instance, one section dealing with penalties stated that "any person is punishable as a principal under this chapter who commits an offense punishable by this chapter, or aids, abets, counsels, commands, or procures its commission," according to the law.
Another clause stated that "any person subject to this chapter who, in breach of an allegiance or duty to the United States, knowingly and intentionally aids an enemy of the United States ... shall be punished as a military commission ... may direct." [Emphasis added]
Presumably, Osama bin Laden has no "allegiance or duty to the United States." Such a phrase seems aimed at American citizens.
But it took the Appeals Court ruling - and the blunt language from Judge Motz about denying constitutional rights to U.S. citizens - to catch the New York Times' attention.
In a July 20 editorial, the Times wrote that the Appeals Court's "decision gives the President sweeping power to deprive anyone - citizens as well as non-citizens - of their freedom. ...
"The implications are breathtaking. The designation 'enemy combatant,' which should apply only to people captured on a battlefield, can now be applied to people detained inside the United States. Even though Mr. Marri is not an American citizen, the court's reasoning appears to apply equally to citizens."
Bush's victory in the Marri case reflects his continued insistence that for the duration of the "war on terror," Bush or any successor can exercise "plenary" - or unlimited - powers as the Commander in Chief.
And, since the "war on terror" will go on indefinitely and since the "battlefield" is everywhere, Bush is asserting the President's right to do whatever he wants to whomever he wants wherever the person might be, virtually forever.
In effect, Bush's interpretation of his own powers - allowing him to imprison, torture and kill at his discretion - trumps the Founders' vision that everyone possesses certain "unalienable rights" that a government can't take away.
Despite some reversals in the U.S. Supreme Court - and the loss of Republican control of Congress in 2006 - Bush still sees himself as a kind of a global monarch who gets to decide which rights and freedoms his subjects anywhere in the world can enjoy and which ones will be denied them.
Al-Marri's Arrest
Al-Marri entered the United States on a legal student visa, along with his wife and children, only a day before the 9/11 attacks. He was arrested amid the panic and fear that followed the attacks, and was charged criminally in a credit-card scheme.
But the Bush administration then asserted that al-Marri was an al-Qaeda "sleeper cell" agent planning follow-up attacks, declared him an "enemy combatant," and locked him up at a Navy brig in South Carolina, where he was held incommunicado.
Eventually, al-Marri challenged his indefinite detention through a federal court suit. Bush's lawyers countered by citing the Military Commissions Act in seeking to deny him access to civilian courts.
In an affidavit submitted to a District Court, a U.S. counter-terrorism official alleged that al-Marri had received al-Qaeda training, was prepared to engage in a suicide attack, and had met personally with Osama bin Laden and other senior terrorist leaders.
However, the original source of that evidence was kept secret, since it presumably was derived from interrogation of al-Qaeda captives, many of whom have been subjected to brutal interrogation methods.
In siding with Bush, conservative Appeals Court judges noted al-Marri had offered only a general denial of the accusations against him and failed to rebut the specific charges. Al-Marri's lawyers argued that their client should have a right to confront his accusers and not be put in a position of having to prove his innocence.
However, the Appeals Court's majority accepted the validity of the "sleeper cell" allegations - since al-Marri had not disproved them - and ruled that Bush did have the authority to lock al-Marri up indefinitely as an "enemy combatant."
"While I would be the first to agree that the criminal justice system retains an important place in our constitutional system when handling the terrorist threat, the notion that it is the only manner of dealing with such threats, or is constitutionally compelled in all cases involving apprehensions on American soil, is simply wrong," wrote Judge Harvie Wilkinson, a Ronald Reagan appointee who is often cited as a possible Republican Supreme Court nominee.
Wilkinson said the government had many good reasons not to grant an accused terrorist a public trial.
"While a showcase of American values, an open and public criminal trial may also serve as a platform for suspected terrorists," Wilkinson wrote. "Terror suspects may use the bully pulpit of a criminal trial in an attempt to recruit others to their cause. Likewise, terror suspects may take advantage of the opportunity to interact with others during trial to pass critical intelligence to their allies."
However, Motz and other more liberal judges dissented on the grounds that the Constitution spells out basic due-process rights for defendants and that denying those rights to non-citizens like al-Marri means that they would be lost to U.S. citizens as well.
"It is likely that the constitutional rights our court determines exist, or do not exist, for al-Marri will apply equally to our own citizens under like circumstances," Motz wrote. "This means simply that protections we declare to be unavailable under the Constitution to al-Marri might likewise be unavailable to American citizens, and those rights which protect him will protect us as well."
Motz's conclusion also wasn't simply based on her opinion. It was a little-notice argument that Bush's lawyers made earlier in the case.
"A citizen, no less than an alien, can be an enemy combatant," administration lawyer David B. Salmons told the Appeals Court in oral arguments on Feb. 1, 2007, adding that the courts cannot interfere with the President's wartime judgments on such matters.
Salmons insisted that Bush is not interested in using this power too broadly, but argued that the judgment on whom is deemed an "enemy combatant" must solely be at the discretion of President Bush. [NYT, Feb. 2, 2007]
What may be decided in Election 2008 is whether the U.S. Supreme Court will be stocked with like-minded legal theorists.
Robert Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories in the 1980s for the Associated Press and Newsweek. His latest book, Neck Deep: The Disastrous Presidency of George W. Bush, was written with two of his sons, Sam and Nat, and can be ordered at neckdeepbook.com. His two previous books, Secrecy & Privilege: The Rise of the Bush Dynasty from Watergate to Iraq and Lost History: Contras, Cocaine, the Press & 'Project Truth' are also available there. Or go to Amazon.com.
Distributed by Consortiumnews.com
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36 Comments so far
Show AllDon't count of Obama to appoint judges who look at the Constitution in the same way that the ACLU does. Don't be shocked if an Obama-appointed judge votes with Scalia, Thomas, and Alito on a FISA case, or on another al-Marri sort of case. Obama has not shown himself to be a friend of the Constitution thus far.
btw... do you think its appropriate for our congress to hold secret meetings and anonymous votes?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w6oa_VwiPvM&feature=related
this isnt a matter of "what if" this happens... is simply a matter of WHEN this happens...
i know i've been talking alot about this bill and it simply terrifies me on how few ppl are talking about it... ESPECIALLY in the media... and thats the...
Violent Radicalization and Homegrown Terrorism Act of 2007
or better known as HR 1955/S1959 (passed in the house with a vote of 404-6 in favor (the 404 breakdown 219 dems and 185 reps)) and is currently sitting in the senate... (which apparently they gave back to DHS for a review and is awaiting their findings) and the cost to the US taxpayer... less than $1 per American over the 2008-2012 period... ah isnt that nice... less then a dollar to remove the last vestige of freedom... thought!
the incredibly vague language of this bill is tantamount to thought crimes... and in their arguments in the house for those that were trying to (and did so successfully steam roll this bill thru) citied ron paul as an example of who would be considered and targeted as a "homegrown" terrorist...
what this bill states in a nutshell is anyone that thinks that the war... the govt... the president and anything else resembling a criticism of how things are being run in this country... and then taking that thought and sharing it with any individual ... either in private or in public... would be seen as terrorist crimes against the "country" and therefore make you eligible to feel first hand what the patriot act and the war crimes bill had in mind for dealing with "terrorism"
so ppl can do one of 3 things....
1. shut up and never say anything ever again to anyone about anything...
2. use google earth to find a nice cave or unpopulated area (forests are great examples)... then go out and buy some sampling gear and supplies... learn how to hunt and fish and just go off the grid and pray that some blackwater type military force never stumbles across your lil hiding spot…
or my personal favorite...
3. first start looking for the rich that live in your particular area and memorize their names and addresses... and then go and find a soap box to tout everything you believe is criminal and bad about anything and everything to do with this country... and after they've "detained" and begin to put their "valuable" techniques of interrogation to you... start throwing out these names...
its a sacrifice that ppl would have to make... but i wonder how long this would go on if our "rich and elite" were arrested under suspicions of being an "enemy combatant"?
yeah yeah i know... its just a pipe dream... but they dont call me dream warrior for nothing *winks*
google:
terror watch list
main core list
fema red blue list
why is our govt making so many lists... makes you wonder huh?
"seems that we have tossed out the Geneva Conventions already, what makes you think that these conventions will protect us?"
Never suggested that they would; simply answering a question. While the US is nominally a signatory to Geneva, they've repudiated it, just as they have their own Constitution and Bill of Rights.
Parry is fear mongering. Valid points are made but why does this read like a tract to be distributed at the DNC? I completely agree with his take on the [non]legality of Gitmo courts, but why use this for political gain? Shouldn't people receive this information for its own sake?
I am not a Democrat; I am not a Republican. Who represents me in the government?
Why is everyone conditioned to believe the myth that only god-fearing, capitalist, republican [or] democratic men* are equipped to run the country.
U.S. elections are a joke. Why are millions brainwashed into complying with one "chosen" side of the same coin?
WHEN THE NAZIS CAME FOR THE COMMUNISTS
I REMAINED SILENT;
I WAS NOT A COMMUNIST
WHEN THEY LOCKED UP THE SOCIAL DEMOCRATS
I REMAINED SILENT
I WAS NOT A SOCIAL DEMOCRAT
WHEN THEY CAME FOR THE TRADE UNIONISTS
I DID NOT SPEAK OUT;
I WAS NOT A TRADE UNIONIST
WHEN THEY CAME FOR THE JEWS
I REMAINED SILENT;
I WAS NOT A JEW
WHEN THEY CAME FOR ME
THERE WAS NO ONE LEFT TO SPEAK OUT
RALPH 442: As per the astrological, August is pretty chilling in that there are 2 eclipses in Leo (Leo/Aquarius as eclipses by their nature invoke polarity) the sign of kings/royalty. I would not rule out the death of a major world leader, and/or an assasination.
I DO like November very much. Saturn represents the authoritarians, those who cater to the old traditional hierarchy and its father figure "head." It's conservative by nature.
Jupiter represents more liberal thinkers, or those who have faith in change. Jupiter can also represent the religious types (preferably those not gone off the "End Times" deep end).
Uranus represents radicals and new inventions. It is the planetary equivalent of the World Social Forum, its eclectic constituents, and what ensues from the novel mixing of unorthodox "parts."
These 3 work a fascinating alliance in November.
I can't say if that means Obama, or if it means the green party has to be heard, but the fact that URANUS proves influential in the November election AND that Saturn and Jupiter work with it, looks to be interesting stuff.
Right now the 2 most intolerant planets, Mars (war, ego, anger, self-centered perspective) and Saturn (karma, repressive influences, tradition-based limitations) are both in letter-of-the-law Virgo. This is a limiting position that narrows judgment considerably. Libra forces (balance, more negotiation between sides) kick in by late August-September and more so in October.
Meanwhile the Great Goddess Demeter sending the hurricane to where the dummies want to drill for yet more oil should remind them who's boss... 2009 favors innovative technologies. Anyone have a solar energy US company they would recommend for investors?
Under the 3rd Geneva Convention....
Hmmmmmmm....
seems that we have tossed out the Geneva Conventions already, what makes you think that these conventions will protect us?
Article 44, sections 3 and 4 of the 1977 First Additional Protocol to the Geneva Conventions
"what is the exact legal status of 'resistance' forces to an occupation. I do know that a country is entitled to resist occupation by a foreign army… Hmmm… I think some research is in order here, unless of course, someone already knows the answer and would care to enlighten us…"
Under the 3rd Geneva Convention, indigenous populations are recognized as having a right to armed resistance to a foreign military occupation, and explicitly states that such persons, including "irregular troops" (guerrillas) are to be accorded the full protections of the Geneva Conventions as any other prisoners of war. The concept of "unlawful enemy combatant" is meaningless outside of the long reach of the United States.
Souixrose, you were unfire tonight but I was hoping for a tiny happy astrological coda at the end. Sigh, it never came. I guess maybe even the stars are pissed off at US.
Hey, they need the fat people to keep selling all those plastic foods and poisonous medicines to. You must remember that here in Amerika were are consumers even before being workers, much less human-beings or citizens.
Although, in the natural order of consumerism one must have money to partake and this generally involves some type of work. When most of the jobs will have been off-shored or outsourced and the middle class is gone, then the internationalists (globalist) will desert this country like a sinking ship, leaving the masses in 3rd or 4th world status... lets get out the survival books, it could be fun.
luckylefty - ever think that we got too many "slaves", and a lot of old and fat ones who do not make good workers. Remember, Stalin said if you don't work, you don't eat. China used to send the old and unfit to happy homes (nobody ever saw them again). They didnt have any fat people.
MiMiCcS 7:28 pm: "The fact that they think they need all these protections from a really docile and subservient group of sheeple indicates whats coming down is going to come down hard enough to even rile the sheeple. Imagine what that could be. Thats scary."
Kind of makes you wonder don't it. Like, how baaaad could the slave plantation get?
Erik Prince coming down the street in a tank?
elmysterio July 22nd, 2008 6:36 pm
The one thing I'm sure of is I have never blamed anyone for defending their own country.
I am also sure that if our situations were reversed, I would be resisting them with rocks if I could find nothing else. I think in Iraq it may not matter because we attacked them when they posed no threat to us, so the right of determination may be on their side no matter what. If I invade your country in other words, without cause, how can anything I do be wrong if I'm trying to drive you out?
Legally???? Anybody?
..................................................
And yes sir, to whomever asked I believe the Constitution exists and is stronger than ever.
I'd appreciate your not calling my country a fascist pile of shit sir, it truly irritates me.
1)In siding with Bush, conservative Appeals Court judges noted al-Marri had offered only a general denial of the accusations against him and failed to rebut the specific charges.
2)However, the Appeals Court's majority accepted the validity of the "sleeper cell" allegations - since al-Marri had not disproved them
1) he has probably never been told the "specific charges", do had no way to rebut them specifically
2) guilty until proven innocent?
From a beacon of freedom to a fascist pile of shit, oh how the mighty USA has fallen
Does anyone really believe the Constitution exists anymore? The Republicans have been practicing with death squads, gulags and 'disappearing' people in South America for thirty years; now they are starting to use those same tactics here.
The military commissions are a joke. If they determine you are innocent, you stay locked up. If they determine you are guilty you, uh, stay locked up. No one goes free, because freedom is a convenient fiction.
While the most hysterical part of me has predicted Bush will not step down in January, the more rational part wonders if it even matters any more. Bush crossed the Rubicon in the 2000 election, and the Republic is but a warm memory now. Face it, we are an imperial dictatorship, awaiting only the official dissolution of congress and the official militarization of all police forces.
With the demise of *habeus corpus* in the US, we could see this coming MONTHS ago.
Have fun :)
The article states," Bush's interpretation of his own powers - allowing him to imprison, torture and kill at his discretion - trumps the Founders' vision that everyone possesses certain "unalienable rights" that a government can't take away."
What stuns me the most are the following:
1. Bush was never elected, and certainly not by a majority
2. 911 was likely an inside job (so the whole "who's got the goods/prisoner thing" is its own fiction).
3. Their own justice department is suing due to the illegal firings of persons not clone-like enough, not authoritarian enough to suit these monkeys who have seized the high office.
4. The rank graft of this war for profit, war in which the case itself was made/falsely FIXED FOR war.
5. Bush puts these right wing stooges into court positions who in turn grant him "power" that's not even transferable as per the Constitution, but it's their own game of quid pro quo and has the appearance of legality.
6. The money is gone. Treasury a/k/a cupboard is bare. It's all been BLOWN.
That anyone would allot to a person with this resume ANY additional power?????????? As if there is here in evidence the remotest form of intelligence, compassion, decency or respect for the citizens of the republic he is sworn to serve? Makes me wish some higher authority would arrive on the scene to NULLIFY every appointment, every bill, every signing statement, every bad decision these homocidal maniacs have been allowed to make. If only the lives taken could be returned...
Time to form your local White Rose affinity group.
Actually, the scope of the Military Commission Act exempts American citizens. However, this country does not really have proof of citizenship as in a National ID car system, so they could make a "mistake". The language in the act is written in such a convoluted way, so it could be interpreted that anyone who is designated an enemy combatent is no longer considered to be a citizen entitled to the protections under the constitution. And besides, if you are not allowed to contact a lawyer, you could never challenge it in court, unless the military commission finds you innocent 10 years later (hardy har har).
There is nobody who is going to save you. The fact that they think they need all these protections from a really docile and subservient group of sheeple indicates whats coming down is going to come down hard enough to even rile the sheeple. Imagine what that could be. Thats scary. Imagine this.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dIJ8J0Rfu_g
When 9/11 happened, my friend was scared to leave the house.
Little did she know that the people that perpetuated her fear posed a greater threat.
What do you think all that HR1955 stuff was, The Homegrown Terrorist and Violent Radicalization Act of 2007, that was off the table buried in committees. Not a bill but he's going to do what ever he wants. I provided that link a million times I've had since January, Adm. Mullen and his interview on Guantanamo Bay and how he, "Feels it's a good thing to close GITMO", then last paragraph he's admiring along the coastline the building going up, he said it would be done by June. What is it? Oh, it's our new 'Detainee Center' which houses a minimum of 10,000...
The first time when everyone thought we had won on FISA, it was Dodd's amended Amendment that passed, Kucinich was the only Dem that voted Nay, so I read all 157 pgs. of Text, they were going to do undocumented workers, or if they thought you were illegal and didn't have 89 pieces of photo ID with you, then you were an X, a non-person, no rights, no name, nothing and could do with you as they pleased, along with that ever elusive definition of "any person" is in there as well.
Thomas: Yes, you are correct about the whole armband thing... What I wonder about though, is what is the exact legal status of 'resistance' forces to an occupation. I do know that a country is entitled to resist occupation by a foreign army... Hmmm... I think some research is in order here, unless of course, someone already knows the answer and would care to enlighten us...
What with global warming(mass migration), recession, inflation, etc., we're looking at turbulent times ahead. The elites are only getting their ducks in order, by establishing the concept of enemy combatants and providing FEMA mass-detainment camps. So mind your p's and q's.
" P.O.W. But of course the excuse is that "They aren't in uniform"… well just because they don't have 'fancy uniforms' doesn't mean anything… do they have a gun? Are they shooting at you? Then they're a soldier. Plain and simple."
A very good point was brought up about this. An armband constitutes a uniform as far as the Geneva convention is concerned.
How many French men, women and children lost their heads from just being 'denounced' and guillotined?
Now any American man, woman or child can suffer being 'dissapeared' by being denounced as a 'suspected enemy combatant' what ever that means. Perhaps it's a Thought Crime like thinking of a White Polar Bear or just thinking of voting.
Alas, America is lost!
Google FEMA Prison Camps.
As noted in the article, the Military Commissions Act of 2006 gave the President the power to have any U.S. citizen he chooses arrested, imprisoned, and "tried" by a Military Commission (the determination that a citizen is an "unlawful enemy combatant" can be made by a Combatant Status Review Tribunal, composed of crony judges of the President's choosing).
It's odd that the recent court decision, which merely affirms powers that the Congress granted to the President two years ago, is causing such a stir. The country must be awfully groggy after such a long nap.
U.S.A: The United Somnambulists of America.
A conservative-dominated U.S. Appeals Court has opened the door for President George W. Bush or a successor to throw American citizens - as well as non-citizens - into a legal black hole
Oh, the horror! Utterly appalling merely to contemplate the possibility that the U.S. might treat its own citizens in a manner like unto its treatment of everyone else in the world.
Better get used to it, folks. You, or at least the commoners amongst you, have joined the rest of the world's plebians as potential threats to the elite establishment's peace of mind and imperial ambitions. And, if you thought that there was some special category of human rights and fundamental justice that could be reserved for USans alone and disregarded for others, you may now begin to discover the fallacy of that premise.
Personally, I think this and other recent police-state moves by U.S. corporatocracy is a gross over-reaction to an infinitessimally miniscule likelihood of any real domestic opposition. But apparently they're not nearly so secure as all the "sheeple" commenters here and elsewhere might lead one to expect.
sl63 - The big difference is when they come for the others here we've got cheerleaders like Rush and O'Reilly leading the screams of delight from the blind flag-wavers in the stands...
As Pastor Martin Niemöller put it:
In Germany, they came first for the Communists, And I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Communist;
And then they came for the trade unionists, And I didn't speak up because I wasn't a trade unionist;
And then they came for the Jews, And I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Jew;
And then . . . they came for me . . . And by that time there was no one left to speak up.
dbesco said: "All the President has to do is declare material law"
That's Martial law... material law would be requiring all of us to go shopping. heh.
"The designation 'enemy combatant,' which should apply only to people captured on a battlefield, can now be applied to people detained inside the United States"
Ummm... That 'designation' shouldn't apply to ANYONE. There is already a term for somebody 'captured on a battlefield'... P.O.W. But of course the excuse is that "They aren't in uniform"... well just because they don't have 'fancy uniforms' doesn't mean anything... do they have a gun? Are they shooting at you? Then they're a soldier. Plain and simple.
Just you wait... this whole 'unlawful enemy combatant' thing is going to bite the US in the ass hard... Any US troops that happen to be captured in future wars, could very well find themselves on the receiving end of such a designation, or even a whole "Fuck the conventions and Red Cross" type situation. The US isn't going to be able to maintain "World's toughest bully" status forever.
What is to stop a police state? All the President has to do is declare material law. GOD BLESS AMERICA. Or who will save us from the manaics?
YURE BUSTED!! ANYONE POSTING HERE IS AIDING AND ABETTING THE ENEMIES OF THE GWOT. JUST BY THINKING BAD THOUGHTS YOU ARE THE ENEMY OF AMERICA.
Signed,
John Roberts
Antonin Scalia
Samuel Alito
Clarence Thomas
& one more and we gotcha!
The plebs have no rights that any richfilth animal, cop, CEO, or elected official need ever consider.
This is what America got when they elected Nixon to put the blacks, the women, and the protesters in their place.
This is what America got when they elected Raygun to gut the Roosevelt Legacy and restore the Oligarchy.
This is what America got when they elected Clinton to gut the remnants of the Roosevelt legacy and establish the "Quick Death & Anti-Terrorism Bill" (created Star Chamber Proceedings) while gutting the last of the social safety net e.g. welfare as you knew it.
They set the stage for two stolen elections, a false flag terror event in NY (a new Pearl Harbor per the PNAC) and a plummeting descent into Hell. This is what America chose. If you didn't support Nixon, Raygun, Clinton, or the Chimp - you are not an American - you're something, but not an American. We do genocide and human slavery here. Nothing else. The rest is pretty pretty words that remain in the corridor with the dress swords and umbrellas.
America chose exclusion and constant war. What did you chose?
from the article:
"What may be decided in Election 2008 is whether the U.S. Supreme Court will be stocked with like-minded legal theorists."
parry, whose work i generally respect, makes two breathtaking assumptions: first, that obama's nominations for SCOTUS will be any better than mccain's; and second, that the majority duhs wouldn't confirm any nominee whose liberal credentials were in doubt.
there is no supporting evidence in the record so far for either of these assumptions.