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Torture Prosecutor Tops 70,000 Questions for Obama on Change.Gov
A whopping 70,000 questions poured into Change.gov over the past week, in response to the Obama transition team's call for citizen queries to the President-Elect. After votes from about 100,000 people, the top ranked question asks Obama whether he will appoint a special prosecutor to investigate allegations of torture and illegal surveillance by the U.S. government. I've been working with activist Bob Fertik to organize support for the question, and several progressive bloggers urged readers and Obama supporters to vote for it last week. Digby, who has written extensively about the Bush administration's abuse of the rule of law, recently reported on the progress:
I wrote a post about [an] initiative spearheaded by Ari Melber of The Nation and Democrats.com to ask President-elect Obama if he will appoint a special prosecutor to investigate war crimes in the Bush administration over at Change.gov. (In a previous round, it was the sixth most asked question...) This time, through their efforts, it's number one. This is particularly important, since the press has only asked Obama about this one time, last April. And a lot has happened since then, most obviously the fact that Vice President is all over television admitting to war crimes as if he's proud of it.
Then The New York Times picked up the news:
[T]he number one submission on the popular "Open for Questions" portion of the site might seem more than a little impolitic to [President Bush]: "Will you appoint a Special Prosecutor -- ideally Patrick Fitzgerald -- to independently investigate the gravest crimes of the Bush Administration, including torture and warrantless wiretapping," wrote Bob Fertik of New York, who runs the Web site, Democrats.com.Though the Obama team has promised to answer some of the top questions as early as this week, they have not said whether they will respond to Mr. Fertik's, which has received more than 22,000 votes since the second round of the question-and-answer feature began on Dec. 30. The site logged more than 1.5 million votes for 20,000-plus questions... The second highest-ranked submission, which is about oversight of the nation's banking industry, is several thousand of votes behind the query about a special prosecutor. Mr. Fertik's question has been pushed to the top, in part, by a coalition of liberal bloggers...
The national press corps has not raised this issue with Obama since his victory. (When it surfaced in April, Obama said he would order his attorney general to "immediately review" the potential crimes.) And while the leading question in the last Change.gov forum was dispatched breezily -- Will you legalize marijuana? No. -- this one is far more challenging, both substantively and politically.
The Times notes that Obama's team has "not said" whether it will even answer Fertik's question, though ignoring the question that came in first out of 74,000 would turn this exercise into a farce. A terse, evasive answer would be similarly unacceptable. After all, there would be little point in this online dialogue if it reiterates things we already know, (Obama is not in N.O.R.M.L.), and refuses to provide new information.
That's why this may be the first big test for Change.gov as a genuinely interactive dialogue.
Thousands of Americans are asking whether President Obama will order an independent investigation to ensure our laws are enforced -- in an era when powerful people in government have engaged in criminal conduct and relentlessly tried to make their behavior off limits for media and political discussion. We expect a "yes," "no" or detailed explanation of how and when Obama and his aides will make this decision. Time is running out, of course, because the question must be answered, for Congress and the public, before Eric Holder's confirmation hearing. He must explain how he will restore independence, professionalism and the rule of law to a Justice Department that politicized U.S. attorneys and covered up torture and warrantless surveillance.
Law professor Jonathan Turley, a nonpartisan legal analyst who testified before Congress in favor of President Clinton's impeachment, recently explained that Holder simply should not be confirmed if he is not prepared to enforce the laws banning torture. "Eric Holder should be asked the same question that Mukasey refused to answer in his confirmation hearing: is waterboarding a crime?" Professor Turley stated. "If he refuses to answer or denies that it is a crime, he should not be confirmed. If he admits that it is a crime, he should order a criminal investigation." According to Change.gov, the crowds agree with the experts on this one.
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7 Comments so far
Show AllHere's your answer...
http://change.gov/newsroom/entry/open_for_questions_round_2_response/
It's a non-committal, we're-looking-forward-not-back answer from Biden.
Bad form!
The responsibility has been shunted to Justice...
Here's hoping the JD will recognize crimes were committed.
It's almost as though they took the words from the mouth of Republican Senator Pat Roberts when he refused in 2004 to allow any further investigation into how the White House deliberatly manipulated bad intelligence to attack Iraq. His words were similar to,"We need to look to the future, not dwell on the past". If those findings had been permitted, it probably would have lead to a different outcome to the 2004 national elections. When the Democrats gained the majority in the Senate in 2006. Senator Rockefeller started that investigation and it was concluded that the White House did indeed manipulate intelligence. Senator Bond, a truly despicable person, offered up 170 proposed amendments to the findings in an attempt to gut the truth. It was passed over his objections.
We need to worry that the mainstream media refuses to carry this story or have the backbone to call for trials. I sent a list of books and other articles to some local newspapers and they refused to print it in their Letter to the Editor. Censorship is alive and well in the good ole USA. The articles can be found on the Internet and any resaonable person would conclude that this administration and their enablers are guilty of war crimes. Articles: "The Torture Memo" The Nation Magazine; "Bush's Pentagon Papers: The Urge to Confess" Tom Dispatch.com; "The Court Martial of Willy Brand" CBS News; "The Memo" New Yorker Magazine; "Mild Penalties in Military Abuse Cases" LA Times; "Taxi to the Dark Side" (movie), "Tortured Reasoning" Vanity Magazine. Robert Mueller, Head of the FBI, admits in the Vanity article that he knew of no terrorist attack that was prevented by "enhanced interrogation techniques" (Torture). Readers of Common Dreams, please send this list to your local newspapers and see what happens? Then send it to your members of Congress and perhaps we can get them to take action. Bush's willingness to smooze with Obama seems to have affected Obamas's thought process. He has to remember that Bush and his co-conspirators are not above the law and have to be held accountable.
Department of Justice refuses to allow the National Center for Victims of Crimes to release reports that show that hundreds of calls per month of victims reporting gang stalking/cause staling are pouring in to the center.
This knid of stalking is pure torture and leads to the complete destruction of victims and their family's.
It is the new FBI Cointel pro program Directed by the DHS and the DOJ knows it.
Thats right, our government is using local community watch groups and gang stalking groups to torture Americans to death.
All you have to do is use google and it will reveal millions of hits on reports of this evil criminal behavior nation wide.
These groups were supposed to be the new American stazi police, and that my friends warrants major attention.
We need special prosecutor and investigations to clean up this law enforcement abuse.
BornFreemen
Gang Stalking warrant less surviellance torture victim for over two years.Bradenton Florida.
In the book Triple Cross by Peter Lance, he provides much well documented evidence that Fitzgerald at best is a well placed self serving official who is not interested in prosecuting cases so that the facts can be judged in the light of day but rather interested in sandbagging investigations so that all the facts are not revealed and high ranking people and his own involvement are not realized. At the worst, he is right smack in the thick of the governments funding of Al Quada and the terrorism cover story.
As for the CIA leak case, over 1 million dollars was spent
to supposedly find out who leaked Plame's name, when BEFORE Fitzgerald
started submitting evidence to a grand jury during the third week of
JAN. 2004, Richard Armitage had already admitted to the justice
department he was the source of the leak during OCT. 2003.
What came out of the investigation were a whole bunch of reporters being
subpoenaed. Reporter Judith Miller spent 85 days in jail. No one was
ever actually charged with leaking Plame's identity. Libby's prison
sentence was commuted before he ever spent a day in jail. A very high profile, well orchestrated investigation designed specifically to chill the media.
We absolutely need a special prosecutor to investigate the heinous crimes of the Bush Administration, including torture and warrantless wiretapping, but she or he needs to be not a political operative putting on the usual dog and pony show.
Legalizing pot would go a long way in restoring Obama's cred with progressives.
From the time I learned of change.gov I have been emailing articles and pressing for action on the criminality of the Bush Administration.
I didn't finish my comment.Over a year ago the Dublin Ireland City Council voted to arrest and bind over to the World Court,George W Bush,for trial should he ever set foot in that city.Just what seems to be our problem?