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Mocking the Law, Judges Rule that Evidence Is Not Necessary to Hold Insignificant Guantánamo Prisoners for the Rest of Their Lives
If I was an American lawyer who had fought for many years to secure habeas corpus rights for the prisoners held at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba — in other words, the right to ask an impartial judge to rule on my captors’ reasons for slinging me in a legal black hole and leaving me to rot there forever — the latest news from the Court of Appeals in Washington D.C. (also known as the D.C. Circuit Court) would make me sick in a bucket rather than believing any longer that the law — the revered law on which the United States was founded — can bring any meaningful remedy for the prisoners at Guantánamo.
Treated as punchbags without rights when first picked up, mostly in Afghanistan and Pakistan in the wake of the 9/11 attacks and the US-led invasion of Afghanistan, the 172 men still held at Guantánamo are still treated with scorn by the administration of Barack Obama, the standard bearer of “hope” and “change,” who promised to close Guantánamo and to do away with “the dark halls of Abu Ghraib and the detention cells of Guantánamo, [where] we have compromised our most precious values.” Instead, however, Obama has revealed himself to be nothing more than a hollow man whose ability to read from an autocue made him look caring, clever and capable when that was exactly the antidote we needed to eight years of Bush and Cheney.
Today, the reason for despair is that on Tuesday the D.C. Circuit Court reversed a ruling made last February by Judge Henry H. Kennedy Jr. of the District Court, in the case of Uthman Abdul Rahim Mohammed Uthman, a Yemeni held at Guantánamo without charge or trial since the prison opened in January 2002. Last February, after examining all the government’s supposed evidence against Uthman, Judge Kennedy ruled that, although the government had presented what appeared to be a coherent timeline of events that was typical for young men from the Gulf, recruited to visit a training camp in Afghanistan to learn to fight for the Taliban against the Northern Alliance, none of the government’s supposed evidence proving Uthman’s presence in guest houses, at a training camp, and in the Tora Bora mountains (where a showdown took place in December 2001 between remnants of al-Qaeda and the Taliban, and Afghan forces recruited to fight for the Americans) was reliable.
The reason for this, Judge Kennedy concluded, was because the government’s supposed evidence consisted of statements produced by other prisoners who had been tortured, and whose testimony was therefore unreliable, as well as other witnesses whose statements were also considered to be untrustworthy.
This could have been the end of the story, and Uthman could have been released, were it not for the fact that he is a Yemeni, and the month before he won his petition, President Obama bowed to hysteria following the announcement that Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, the failed Christmas Day plane bomber, had been recruited in Yemen by announcing an immediate, open-ended moratorium on releasing any Yemenis from Guantánamo.
The fact that this moratorium was unjustifiable, consigning prisoners cleared for release by a US court, or by Obama’s own interagency Guantánamo Review Task Force, to indefinite detention on the basis of “guilt by nationality,” appeared to trouble no one, and, similarly, no one blinked when every Yemeni who won his habeas corpus petition — with one heroic exception — subsequently had his successful petition appealed.
This was in spite of the fact that it was obvious to anyone who was reasonably sentient that the main reason for doing so was to avoid having to try to persuade Congress that an exception should be made to the moratorium, which, very clearly, was actually intended to function as a permanent obstacle to the release of any Yemeni, the kind of legally and morally dubious device that President Bush also favored, although his chosen vehicle was the executive order.
The noble exception, by the way, was Mohammed Hassan Odaini, a student who had been seized while staying the night wth other students at their universtiy dorm in Faisalabad, Pakistan, in March 2002. Many of the other students staying in the dorm are still held, but Odaini was lucky because a judge reached the point where he was satisfied that he could make a ruling on his habeas petition, and forcefully explained that the US government had no reason for having deprived Odaini of eight years of his life, when intelligence officials knew, almost from the moment of his capture, that he was an innocent man.
It also helped that his case was picked up by the Washington Post, which ran an editorial entitled, Meet one Gitmo inmate who can’t be described as ‘the worst of the worst.’ At this point, he became a kind of minor celebrity victim, and the administration conceded that it wouldn’t dare appeal, although officials still made a concession to outrageousness by explaining, straight-faced, that they still would have challenged his release if they hadn’t discovered that he was from a good family. “People [in the administration] were comfortable with this,” an anonymous official told the Washington Post, “because of the guy’s background, his family and where he comes from in Yemen.”
For Uthman Abdul Rahim Mohammed Uthman — not as well-connected as Mohammed Hassan Odaini — all that awaited him was a date with the D.C. Circuit Court that was bound to result in Judge Kennedy’s ruling being reversed, and Uthman himself being consigned to indefinite detention at Guantánamo for the rest of his life.
The reason I state this with such confidence is that, since they first began considering Guantánamo habeas appeals last January, the judges of the D.C. Circuit Court — and, in particular, Judges A. Raymond Randolph, Brett M. Kavanaugh and Janice Rogers Brown — have generally functioned as though possessed by the spirit of George W. Bush and Dick Cheney, sedating the spirit of justice and taking revenge on the Supreme Court, which granted constitutionally guaranteed habeas corpus rights to the Guantánamo prisoners in June 2008.
Of these, Judge Randolph is the most notorious, having endorsed every piece of Guantánamo legislation that came his way under the Bush administration, even though all his rulings were subsequently reveresed by the Supreme Court, but all of them (plus others, in various combinations) have almost entirely guaranteed success for the government’s appeals in the habeas legislation, as I explained in my articles, Guantánamo and Habeas Corpus: Prisoners Win 3 out of 4 Cases, But Lose 5 out of 6 in Court of Appeals (Part One), Guantánamo and Habeas Corpus: Prisoners Win 3 out of 4 Cases, But Lose 5 out of 6 in Court of Appeals (Part Two) and Habeas Hell: How the Great Writ Was Gutted at Guantánamo.
In challenging, reversing and vacating the District Court opinions, the D.C.Circuit Court has issued a contentious opinion about unfettered executive power, which claimed greater wartime powers for the government than senior officials wanted, wondered — in an opinion by Judge Randolph — why any kind of test was required for the quality of the government’s evidence in cases related to terrorism, and, most damagingly for the prisoners, decided that the involvement with al-Qaeda and/or the Taliban that is required to justify detention is not, as the District Court judges decided, limited to some sort of involvement in the command structure of the organizations (intended to demonstrate important indicators like the requirement to take orders), but is, instead, the much more open-ended requirement that those under consideration are “part of” al-Qaeda and/or the Taliban.
On Tuesday, demonstrating quite how open-ended this description is, Judge Kavanaugh, who wrote the judges’ opinion, declared, as ProPublica stated, “that the government doesn’t need direct evidence that a detainee fought for or was a member of al-Qaeda in order to justify a detention.” ProPublica added that the court “determined that circumstantial evidence, such as a detainee being in the same location as other al-Qaeda members, is enough to meet the standard to hold a prisoner without charge.”
In the ruling (PDF), the judges wrote, “Uthman’s account piles coincidence upon coincidence upon coincidence … it remains possible that Uthman was innocently going about his business and just happened to show up in a variety of extraordinary places — a kind of Forrest Gump in the war against al-Qaeda. But Uthman’s account at best strains credulity, and the far more likely explanation for the plethora of damning circumstantial evidence is that he was part of al-Qaeda.”
Jonathan Hafetz, a professor at Seton Hall Law School, who has represented several Guantánamo prisoners including Mohamedou Ould Salahi, who, last November, had his successful petition vacated and sent back to the District Court to reconsider, complained that the Circuit Court’s ruling “significantly favors the government in ways the Supreme Court did not intend when it granted detainees the right to challenge detentions.”
“The Uthman case cements the trend in the D.C. Circuit’s decisions toward a broad and malleable definition of who can be considered ‘part of’ al-Qaeda, combined with a highly deferential view of the government’s interpretation of the facts,” Hafetz said. “In many cases, the result is indefinite detention based on suspicion or assumptions about a detainee’s behavior.”
He added that the ruling is not only dismissive of the considered approach taken by the District Court, but is also dismissive of the intent of the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court, he said, “mandated a meaningful judicial process in which the government would be called to account; Uthman says judges should not require much in the way of an answer.”
The other problem for Uthman, and for the majoriity of the other prisoners who have lost their habeas petitions (22 out of 59 cases in total), is that all this legal maneuvering fails to address a fundamental problem with the habeas petitions that no one has ever wanted to deal with — the fact that the habeas petitions are specifically to decide whether the government is able to demonstrate, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the prisoners in question were involved with al-Qaeda and/or the Taliban, without making any distinction between them, even though one is a terrorist group, and the other was the government of Afghanistan at the time of the 9/11 attacks.
This refusal to distinguish between two decidedly different groups — despite the limited crossover between them, which also extended to a failure to realize that those who trained in camps associated wth al-Qaeda were generally only involved in what might be called al-Qaeda’s military wing, rather than its involvement with international terrorism — is enshrined in the founding document of the “War on Terror,” the Authorization for Use of Military Force. Passed by Congress the week after the 9/11 attacks, the AUMF authorizes the President to “use all necessary and appropriate force against those nations, organizations, or persons he determines planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001,” or those who harbored them.
Interpreted by the Supreme Court, in Hamdi v. Rumsfeld, in June 2004, as “clearly and unmistakably” authorizing the detention of individuals, the AUMF therefore provides the rationale for holding prisoners neither as criminal suspects, to be put forward for trials, nor as prisoners of war protected by the Geneva Conventions, but as what Bush called “illegal enemy combatants,” and it crafts the fiction, maintained ever since, that terrorists and soldiers are somehow one and the same, when, if those involved in the habeas legislation were allowed to express an honest and unguarded opinion about many of the cases, I’m sure that many of them would concede that terrorists are criminals, whereas those involved in the Taliban’s military conflict with the Northern Alliance, which morphed, after 9/11, into a global war against the US, were nothing more than soldiers, and should have been held as such according to the Geneva Conventions.
Time and again, however — and Uthman is just the latest example — these foot soldiers have been losing petitions and being slung back into Guantánamo as though they were convicted terrorists, even when they are no such thing, and, in two cases, were not even foot soldiers but a cook and a medic. Sadly, few people realize that this is what has been happening, as the mainstream media in the US has done little to interest the American public in the prisoners’ habeas corpus petitions.
However, as with my imaginary scenario with the judges, if it were possible to make a cross-section of the American public sit down for a few hours and have spelled out to them the stories of those who have been losing their habeas petitions and who may now spend the rest of their lives in Guantánamo, I’m sure that they too would realize that there’s an enormous difference between someone involved in a plot to kill hundreds or thousands of civilians on the US mainland or anywhere else in the world, and someone who attended a training camp, and may, in some way or another, have engaged in military conflict with the Northern Alliance and/or the US military in Afghanistan.
Nearly ten years after the 9/11 attacks, the time to sort out the difference between terrorists and soldiers is surely long overdue, so that people like Uthman are treated with justice, rather than the lingering effects of the hyperbole that typefied the Bush administration’s “War on Terror.” Moroever, it is also important for America itself to stop pretending that there is a magical third category of prisoner on whose heads can be poured all the pain and loss of 9/11. Prisoners are either criminal suspects, to be put on trial, or soldiers, seized in wartime, to be held as prisoners of war and protected by the Geneva Conventions.
Note: For details of all the habeas cases ruled on in the US courts, see the dedicated page,Guantánamo Habeas Results: The Definitive List, which is regularly updated when new developments are announced.
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54 Comments so far
Show All"We hold these truths to be SELF-EVIDENT, that ALL men are created EQUAL, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain UNALIENABLE RIGHTS, that among these are LIFE, LIBERTY, and the PURSUIT OF HAPPINESS".
Yea, tell that to those held without trial at Guantanamo, and may I add, the Japanese Americans held in concentration camps in WWII, the American Slave and the American Indian, to mention a few.
It always amazes me to see how those who had once considered themselves the oppressed, are willing to become the oppressors, and then to ignore the hypocrisy their own actions.
In all fairness, the "Founding Fathers" didn't believe a word of what they were writing either. The Founding Fathers were our first plutocratic elite, terrified of real democracy, and jealous guards of their economic, social, and political privilege.
Yea I guess the more things change the more they stay the same.
Yes the founders thought that "ALL men are created equal" as long as they are white, rich, male and of Northern European descent. As Orwell noted in his famous allegory "Animal Farm," "...some animals are more equal than others."
Al Qaeda was a paramilitary group with camps in a country where the Taliban was the government. Al Qaeda has been declared a terrorist organization. This sets a precedent for the paramilitary groups located in the USA to be branded as terrorist organizations and subject to the whims of the USG without any consideration of constitutional and legal protections.
When Pres Bush #1 held the crack cocaine on TV and started a new phase in the War on Drugs, ZERO TOLERANCE, the New World Order took a stride forward. So many were illegally arrested for drugs and had their properties seized with no court action - me being one of those. Now Obama beats the drums for the NWO to march forward.
It's time to give-up on the government and start trying to make our local lives better and maybe some type of grassroots spirit will work its way up. Individuals no longer matter to the laws of the USA.
I believe that it was Reagan who started the zero-tolerance policy.
q
Maybe so, but shortly after the Bush 'cocaine' speech, the government went nuts with illegal arrests and seizures. 60 Minutes reported on it in 1990. I was 'terrorized' just weeks after the Bush speech, so it really sticks in my mind.
"It's time to give up on the government..."
I would propose that it's time to ABOLISH the government. You're correct that "Individuals no longer matter to the laws of (AmeriKKKa)" unless, of course, the are among the ruling elite. Unless and until We the People make radical changes in the way government operates, laws will only get more repressive, wages will buy less and fewer will prosper.
General strikes, boycotts and non-violent direct action. NOW!
Be hard to keep things nonviolent in present day America where there are so many Tea Partiers who are touchy about what they see as attempts to deprive them of their "right to bear arms." The owners and operators certainly deserve to have general strikes and boycotts done at them. Whether they would lead to GOOD changes in the way government operates . . . well, unless those changes are spelled out ahead of time, I have my doubts.
I hope we can avoid violence. I'm not into it at all. I'll duck for cover and run.
I'm not into violence either, but I suspect most of these tea party clowns are far too queasy at the sight of blood to start anything of the sort. They talk and talk about their guns, but how many of them have actually seen how flesh and bone come off second best to a full metal jacket?
I agree 100%. Most people who brag about their guns and ammo are/were afraid of nobodies like Saddam and Osama who owe(d) their very existences to the US taxpayer.
If a violent revolution started, then think Civil War, except this time the US Gov has all the BIG guns, the power over technology (Internet, MSM) and the puny Tea Party and NRA will be out of bullets for their handguns and rifles in a matter of days, while Predator Drones and F-22's (whatever is the current jet fighter) blast their homes to smithereens! There would be no fuel. Only another invading country could come to the rescue of the 'revolutionaries' and since they are "USA, ALL THE WAY!" that option is off the table.
Yep, the cowards like Beck, Coulter, Limbaugh - they'd get their asses down to the Cayman Islands or someplace safe and warm. One would not see them leading the opposition.
Oh well....
You both are probably right but I don't trust armed mobs. All it takes is one wacko to pull one trigger and the free-for-all shoot-'em-up is on. I wouldn't want to be there betting my life that cowardice will trump panicky rage,
You mean like the US military does around the world.
I'll paraphrase Stalin's famous remark about voting. It doesn't matter how laws are written; what matters is who interprets them.
Ten judges can read the same law and derive ten different meanings.
jj
The way Obama is acting, 180 degrees from his campaign promises so soon after election, one must believe someone has something on him which would get his election nullified. Or he is the most pathological liar ever to be in the White House.
Someone may have a birth certificate showing he was born in Kenya.
I personally believe that he's just chicken shit.
jj
Yeah. I've always had the notion that the Powers that Be have threatened him (or maybe his family) with 'harm' if he doesn't tow the corpora-fascist line.
I don't believe that at all. I'm with quickstepper. He's just chickenshit. And part of the "powers that be."
Judging from events in Stalinist Russia, Hitler's Germany and now in Bush/Cheney/Obama's AmeriKKKa, most people do not have the ability to accept that some are willing to commit deeds so monstrous and hideous that millions suffer indescribable torment and death. Instead, they cling to the notion that if only our leaders knew the cruelties that are occurring, they would surely put an end to them.
God damn AmeriKKKa!
OK, so Obama is a pathological liar doing the work of the corporate ruling elite.
Yup, that about sums it up.
It's all part of the phenomena one can study under the heading of "ponerology". Back in the day people weren't afraid to call its name, Evil. I've had some argue to me no such thing exists. I tell them "Open the door to police who tell you your father has been murdered, in cold blood for absolutely no accountable reason then tell me Evil does not exist." Usually shuts them up.
Obama is a Republican and knew he could not get nominated by the Republican Party, so he pretended to be a Democrat.
There ya go. The rule of law becomes fuzzier and fuzzier with every decision that is made by our corporate judges. Pretty soon, we'll be imitating Castro's good days when a "trial" consisted of the judge, the prosecutor, the accused and the witness(es). The state never ever lost a trial. Ha ha!
A Yiddish proverb explains it best. "Choose your enemies well for you will become just like them". Here we are, just like the old USSR a failed empire. Einstein, "Insanity is doing the same failed thing over and over expecting a different result".The USG is modeling itself after the old USSR, expecting a different result.
I thought that when Dubya left office, surely these cases would be allowed to wind their way through the legal system. But no. What we have here is a type of legal limbo reminiscent of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's stories about the Gulag Archipelago. Guantanamo has become America's Gulag. Did anybody ever think we'd see it in the USA?
This echoes some thoughts I had at the time of the collapse of the Berlin Wall, etc. Everyone one kept saying, "We won, we won. The Evil Empire has fallen." I remember thinking that it was a very short term way to think. For the US to "win" against the Soviet Union etc that we'd have to out survive them by at least 100 years, minimum. History of Empires or Dynasties, what have you, are measured by centuries, nothing less. I remember about 5 years later ABC had a mini-series 'Amerika" advertising a plot portraying what looked like totalitarianism and I was upset, promoting the idea of boycotting that show because I felt it was a testing of the waters. I had one sibling that thought I was a nut and he watched and enjoyed the series. Of course, he is now a Teabag idiot amongst other character defects so no surprises there. Or how about Janet Jackson's "Rhythm Nation" that was a creepy video. All "programming" the folks to accept fascism in frog- boiling fashion.That's why it is important that people call out things like Prince Harry wearing a Nazi uniform as a free standing costume choice.
wow ... Worthington's work/webpage is amazing!
All this unjust USA behavior, there is no leadership, or responsibility, to the wrong actions carried out in the name of the USA. It wasn't until 2008 that the US Supreme Court, finally got around to ruling Boumediene vs. Bush, ....(thats about 6 YEARS to late). The US Supreme Court unjustly continued the joke, by returning said judgement to the lower court of which continued the sad assault for at least another year, against Boumediene. Not one Supreme Court Justice lifted a finger to physically, pull Boumediene out of the trouble, even tho they ruled that he was unjustly unheard and in serious trouble. I may be naive of the legal process, but 'the process' is obviously part of the problem.
For me the USA lost all respect for itself, even under clouds of secrecy the USA, insisted and helped the worst leadership destroy dignity.
whocares;)
Destroying dignity is paramount in the process. Dignity is replaced with "pride, patriotism" no so called leaders talk about dignity because they don't know what it is or have it. Dignity is destroyed by making people realize that they cannot protect themselves or their families and that is the purpose of the TSA, strip people of their dignity for obedience training purposes.
TSA= Transportation Security Administration? or TitS&Ass? or Torture States of America?
*sigh* ...yeah bogi666 dignity is long gone, replaced with subtle slavery as usual...replete with the reverse SERE techniques~~economic, military or corporate style.
whocares;)
This got discussed in a previous thread involving Uthmani, but it's worth raising again.
The DC Circuit is the only circuit authorized to hear the habeas cases. That means another circuit cannot raise a conflict with the DC Circuit, and the only way to the Supreme Court is by certiorari. All the Supreme Court has to do to set Uthmani in concrete as the law is to deny certiorari. If Kagan votes with the current majority (as many of us suspect she will), then the vote is 6-3 to deny, and that is the end of that.
It's a virtually unfixable situation.
Question is, is Amerika an unfixable country? Probably, IMHO.
If the United States isn't fixable, it will go down and take the rest of the "developed" world with it. I think it probably is indeed unfixable, but I refuse to completely give up the microscopic shred of hope I have that some genius will find a way to lead us all out of this mess. It's a long shot, to be sure.
People tell me to stop waiting for someone to lead the way, that we all just have to get in there and do it ourselves. To them I ask, do exactly what?
Why aren't the law schools weighing in more aggressively against the corruption at all levels of our legal system? These judges, including the Supreme Court justices, are making an absolute mockery of the rule of law, and the law schools seem to accept it as business as usual.
The deans of our nation's law schools need to rise up as one and condemn the way the law is being abused/ignored/subverted at the state and national levels.
Otherwise, they should close their schools and acknowledge that Lady Justice has her blindfold off and is pushing down hard on the scales with her right hand.
The judiciary is corrupt and law schools teach them how to be corrupt.
There is no justice, there is no law for the many; there is only privilege for the few. Tony
The Law? Please.
Habeas corpus suspended. War criminals not prosecuted, but rewarded; Bankster criminals not prosectuted, rewarded with billions etc.
The world's most destructive and blood-soaked criminals are lauded as wise statesmen (Kissinger, Blair, Bush, Cheney, Obama, Clinton, Gates et al.) The world's most destructive financial terrorists (Moynihan, Dimon, Blankfein, Masters et al.) making billions and with a pocket-full of "get out of jail free" cards and owning the entire country.
Anyone who can speak of the "rule of law" is either in the depths of Stockholm Syndrome or woefully ignorant.
If these unfortunates are not treated as "the vilest of the vile" then the sheeple might start to raise questions about the 9-11 "attacks".
""Mocking the Law, Judges Rule that Evidence Is Not Necessary to Hold Insignificant Guantánamo Prisoners for the Rest of Their Lives""
*****************
Not at all, that will prevent them from revealing unpleasant information that may not cast the 'administrators' in a favorable light. Think hillbilly hillary and Bradley Manning.
Which reminds me, is it possible that all the people involved in 9/11 and renditioned to keep their mouths shut, would they be dead by now?
Hummm... It just happens that I recently wrote a book on the topic of law and other things. I tell about my prosecution and 4 year legal battle. My crime - standing in silence, holding a sign as I opposed the war. Meanwhile USA bombs were slaughtering unarmed civilians. None of the killers were Tried. I, and many others were.
Title of my book is BANNED IN VERMONT. Check it out.
"Force without judgment will fall of its own weight." - Horace
What this Kafka-esque fascist nightmare all boils down to is an anti-Constitutional, anti-Geneva Conventions promulgation of the Bush Doctrine war trigger as applied to individual human beings--U.S. citizens or not.
The Bush Doctrine shifted the war trigger of "Amurka" from "EVIDENCE of a clear and present danger" to national security to "SUSPICION of a threat" to national security ("national security" itself being a vast grey umbrella term applied in far too many circumstances that are meritless).
This Judge's rule shifts the government's burden of proof necessary to indefinitely detain an individual from hard evidence of, to suspicion of a threat to national security. This basically obviates any true "burden of PROOF" for the government in such cases and amounts to the equivalent of an automatic autocratic Bastille system to wantonly convert any political undesirable into a permanent political prisoner who never faces true charges and never sees the light of day.
It's looking more and more like French Revolution time for Amurka every day.
Conservatism is a contagious disease
And, unfortunately, probably incurable.
Sorry to cross-post, but I think this belongs here also. Nos. 2, 3 & 12 are really appropriate here.
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If you can find anything on this list that we are NOT doing, please let me know.
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Fourteen Defining
Characteristics Of Fascism
By Dr. Lawrence Britt
Source Free Inquiry.co
5-28-3
Dr. Lawrence Britt has examined the fascist regimes of Hitler (Germany), Mussolini (Italy), Franco (Spain), Suharto (Indonesia) and several Latin American regimes. Britt found 14 defining characteristics common to each:
1. Powerful and Continuing Nationalism - Fascist regimes tend to make constant use of patriotic mottos, slogans, symbols, songs, and other paraphernalia. Flags are seen everywhere, as are flag symbols on clothing and in public displays.
2. Disdain for the Recognition of Human Rights - Because of fear of enemies and the need for security, the people in fascist regimes are persuaded that human rights can be ignored in certain cases because of "need." The people tend to look the other way or even approve of torture, summary executions, assassinations, long incarcerations of prisoners, etc.
3. Identification of Enemies/Scapegoats as a Unifying Cause - The people are rallied into a unifying patriotic frenzy over the need to eliminate a perceived common threat or foe: racial , ethnic or religious minorities; liberals; communists; socialists, terrorists, etc.
4. Supremacy of the Military - Even when there are widespread domestic problems, the military is given a disproportionate amount of government funding, and the domestic agenda is neglected. Soldiers and military service are glamorized.
5. Rampant Sexism - The governments of fascist nations tend to be almost exclusively male-dominated. Under fascist regimes, traditional gender roles are made more rigid. Divorce, abortion and homosexuality are suppressed and the state is represented as the ultimate guardian of the family institution.
6. Controlled Mass Media - Sometimes the media is directly controlled by the government, but in other cases, the media is indirectly controlled by government regulation, or sympathetic media spokespeople and executives. Censorship, especially in war time, is very common.
7. Obsession with National Security - Fear is used as a motivational tool by the government over the masses.
8. Religion and Government are Intertwined - Governments in fascist nations tend to use the most common religion in the nation as a tool to manipulate public opinion. Religious rhetoric and terminology is common from government leaders, even when the major tenets of the religion are diametrically opposed to the government's policies or actions.
9. Corporate Power is Protected - The industrial and business aristocracy of a fascist nation often are the ones who put the government leaders into power, creating a mutually beneficial business/government relationship and power elite.
10. Labor Power is Suppressed - Because the organizing power of labor is the only real threat to a fascist government, labor unions are either eliminated entirely, or are severely suppressed.
11. Disdain for Intellectuals and the Arts - Fascist nations tend to promote and tolerate open hostility to higher education, and academia. It is not uncommon for professors and other academics to be censored or even arrested. Free expression in the arts and letters is openly attacked.
12. Obsession with Crime and Punishment - Under fascist regimes, the police are given almost limitless power to enforce laws. The people are often willing to overlook police abuses and even forego civil liberties in the name of patriotism. There is often a national police force with virtually unlimited power in fascist nations.
13. Rampant Cronyism and Corruption - Fascist regimes almost always are governed by groups of friends and associates who appoint each other to government positions and use governmental power and authority to protect their friends from accountability. It is not uncommon in fascist regimes for national resources and even treasures to be appropriated or even outright stolen by government leaders.
14. Fraudulent Elections - Sometimes elections in fascist nations are a complete sham. Other times elections are manipulated by smear campaigns against or even assassination of opposition candidates, use of legislation to control voting numbers or political district boundaries, and manipulation of the media. Fascist nations also typically use their judiciaries to manipulate or control elections.
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I discussed this at length in a few of my blog entries.
http://steveosborn.blogspot.com/2010/02/what-is-fascism-really.html
http://steveosborn.blogspot.com/2010/03/our-fairly-subtle-conversion-to-fascism.html
http://steveosborn.blogspot.com/2010/03/kucinich-votes-yes-whats-new.html
I fear it may be too late unless we listen to Jefferson.
“The two enemies of the people are criminals and government, so let us tie the second down with the chains of the Constitution so the second will not become the legalized version of the first.
“The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants. It is its natural manure.”
Thomas Jefferson
1743-1826
Knowing there is no way in traditional law to hold these people in prison forever- and t's not just gitmo- there are about 60,000 plus in the gulag- bush and his judges and obmber moved the goal posts. the government deos not need to prove anything now. just tell the judge this suspect was at an airport once used by an al Queda suspect and down the black hole he goes. circumstantial evidence they said is good enough.
jailed for life because somebody thinks you might have been associated with a semi imaginary thing called al Qaeda- maybe this is one of those things people have to deny because to believe it is really happening too horrible.
but thanks again Andy- keep it alive, keep up your work
Now that Obama has recended Habius Corpus anyone can be jailed for life on a whim without evidence, trial or convection.
Remember that the government has reserved for itself the right to declare whomever it wants as a terrorist. And a terrorist can be anyone who decides to oppose empire by any means necessary. The war on terror is a war against resistence. Merely being accused of being a terrorist, or being near terrorists, or being sympathetic to terrorists is sufficient to incarcerate you in a gulag for life. For the courts the standard of evidence would be about the same as convicting me for being a Communist because I have things in my house made in China.
As I have said: the Republic is dead! Long live the emperor!
HAIL OBAMA! Our fearless leader!