Be INFORMED

Saturday, February 03, 2007

Gas-Price Conspiracy? You Bet!

Tuesday, January 02, 2007

Listen to this commentary

Commentator and consumer advocate Jamie Court says there IS evidence that oil companies intentionally influence gas-price fluctuations.

JAMIE COURT: Say you're an oil executive and you want to keep the Republicans in control of Congress. What can you do prior to an election?
Well, you can keep your refineries running at full speed, flood the market with extra fuel, and take less per gallon in profit than usual.
And guess what: Department of Energy data suggest that's exactly what the oil companies did this fall. More TEXT

Jamie Court is the president of the Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer Rights.

   So what's new? We all know that the big three oil companies have been fucking us all for years,but, this story has some good points in it that you do not want to miss. READ IT!

 

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Rush Limbaugh on Global Warming

    Rush Limbaugh, the ever so intelligent idiot behind the microphone on radio stations everywhere, stuck in his two cents worth on the global warming issue.

   He dished out the usual GOP bullshit line that the warming is non-existent and that science is pretty much lying to everyone.

   The funniest part was his comments about a pic that was taken of polar bears stranded on a piece of ice which had broken off of the bigger piece.

     Entire Text and Audio

RUSH: This whole thing is totally misleading. They're not even stranded on an ice floe that's broken apart. They're just out there just playing around. They're just out there. You know, just like your cat goes to its litter box. When's the last time your cat got stranded in its litter box?

When you look at the headline, and the accompanying story ought to inform everybody of the utter desperation and phoniness of the entire global warming effort.

    Poor old Rush must be out of pills. Did you know that withdrawal will make you say stupid things?

 

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Sen. Sam Brownback Missing Many Votes In January

(AP) -- Senator Sam Brownback missed more than half of the votes in the Senate last month as he ramped up his campaign for president.

The Kansas Republican skipped 20 of the 39 roll call votes in
January -- or 51 percent -- according to Senate voting records. That's a higher absence rate than any other member of the Senate except South Dakota Democrat Tim Johnson, who's recovering from a brain hemorrhage.

Many of those votes were skipped while Brownback traveled to bolster his White House bid. Brownback had a 98 percent voting record in past years.

Spokesman Brian Hart said Brownback "will continue to serve the people of Kansas to the best of his ability."

   I guess that Senator Brownback's abilities are kind of limited since he would rather spend his time readying for a presidential nomination instead of taking care of the people's business back in Kansas.

    I think that his 98 percent voting record in the past was easier when all he had to do was say 'yes' when Bush wanted something passed and he did not have to be accountable to the people.

   Brownback needs to be reminded that he is getting paid to serve his people first, and everything else second!

 

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Bush offers Democrats Conciliatory Words! Did They Bite Into It?

"You know, I welcome debate in a time of war and I hope you know that," Bush said to about 200 lawmakers at a Virginia resort.

   From the report by the Associate Press, it sounds more as if Bush was playing kiss-up while some of the Democrats were kissing ass!

AP

He said disagreeing with him over the war — as many in the room do — does not mean "you don't share the same sense of patriotism I do."

"You can get that thought out of your mind, if that's what some believe," the president said. "These are tough times, but there's no doubt in my mind that you want to secure this homeland as much as I do."

Bush's conciliatory words were similar to some of his previous statements. But the applause and acknowledgment that followed them offered some indication that this audience was happy to hear them so directly and in person.

"We were honored by your presence. We're also encouraged by your remarks," House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of California said after Democrats met privately with the president. "I believe we have an opportunity to work together."

    I hope that the Democrats are just being nice and not falling for this shit. It is to early for us to have to start working on taking them out of office again, so soon.

                            IMPEACH! INDICT! IMPRISON!

 

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Windows Vista Gets Bugged

   Leave it to Microsoft to put out a new OS (operating system) that gets bugged within it's first week of release!

   I am speaking of the new Vista system that has been touted as having much better security features. Much better than what,Windows 95?

   The vulnerability is in Windows Vista’s speech recognition feature, which most users generally do not enable. The attackers’ commands are limited to the rights of the logged on user so there is no concern with administrative level commands.

    You have to have a microphone and a set of speakers connected to your system in order for the attack to be successful and , as stated, speech recognition must be enabled.

   The technical explanation is one that you should read if you are using Vista. It is easy to understand, it just sound nutty when you read it.

   For the outline of the problem and what you can do about it, you can go here

 

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The President's March To Iran

    More on the Presidents march to war with Iran, coming from Vanity Fair:

 

From the Wonderful Folks Who Brought You Iraq

The same neocon ideologues behind the Iraq war have been using the same tactics—alliances with shady exiles, dubious intelligence on W.M.D.—to push for the bombing of Iran. As President Bush ups the pressure on Tehran, is he planning to double his Middle East bet?

by Craig Unger March 2007   Entire Article

In the weeks leading up to George W. Bush's January 10 speech on the war in Iraq, there was a brief but heady moment when it seemed that the president might finally accept the failure of his Middle East policy and try something new. Rising anti-war sentiment had swept congressional Republicans out of power. Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld had been tossed overboard. And the Iraq Study Group (I.S.G.), chaired by former secretary of state James Baker and former congressman Lee Hamilton, had put together a bipartisan report that offered a face-saving strategy to exit Iraq. Who better than Baker, the Bush family's longtime friend and consigliere, to talk some sense into the president?

By the time the president finished his speech from the White House library, however, all those hopes had vanished. It wasn't just that Bush was doubling down on an extravagantly costly bet by sending 21,500 more American troops to Iraq; there were also indications that he was upping the ante by an order of magnitude. The most conspicuous clue was a four-letter word that Bush uttered six times in the course of his speech: Iran.

   You can also check this out from ConsortiumNews while you're at it.

   To know what Bush is going to say when his rhetoric begins to pick up, just remember the Iraq bullshit with Iran substituted into the correct spots.

    This man is once again marching towards a war with a bagful of lies to the American people on why it is necessary! We all have to stop this punk!

                            IMPEACH! INDICT! IMPRISON!

 

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Keith Olbermann-Bush Shoots For "Jaws," Delivers "Jaws 2"

     Before you start buying into the Bush rhetoric as he seeks a way to make attacking Iran palatable to the American public, you may want to be reminded a little of the lies that Bush used for Iraq.

Here is one of Keith Olbermann's " Special Comments".

Bush shoots for ‘Jaws,’ delivers ‘Jaws 2’
President claimed to stop four terror plots, but where is the evidence?       Olbermann Video

TEXT:

SPECIAL COMMENT
By Keith Olbermann
Anchor, 'Countdown'
MSNBC
Updated: 10:20 p.m. CT Jan 30, 2007

West Yorkshire in England has a new chief police constable.

Upon his appointment, Sir Norman Bettison made one of the strangest comments of the year:

"The threat of terrorism," he says, "is lurking out there like 'Jaws 2.'"

Sir Norman did not exactly mine the richest ore for his analogy of warning. A critic once said of the flopping sequel to the classic film: "You're gonna need a better screenplay."

But this obscure British police official has reminded us that terrorism is still being sold to the public in that country - and in this - as if it were a thrilling horror movie and we were the naughty teenagers about to be its victims.

And it underscores the fact that President Bush took this tack, exactly a week ago tonight, in his terror-related passage in the State of the Union.

A passage that was almost lost amid all the talk about Iraq and health care and bipartisanship and the fellow who saved the stranger from an oncoming subway train in New York City.

But a passage ludicrous and deceitful. Frightening in its hollow conviction.

Frightening, in that the president who spoke it tried for "Jaws" but got "Jaws 2."

I am indebted to David Swanson, press secretary for Dennis Kucinich's 2004 presidential campaign, who has blogged about the dubious 96 words in Mr. Bush's address this year and who has concluded that of the four counterterror claims the president made, he went 0-for-4.

"We cannot know the full extent of the attacks that we and our allies have prevented," Mr. Bush noted, "but here is some of what we do know: We stopped an al-Qaeda plot to fly a hijacked airplane into the tallest building on the West Coast."

This would of course, sir, be the purported plot to knock down the 73-story building in Los Angeles, the one once known as the Library Tower - the one you personally revealed so breathlessly a year ago next month.

It was embarrassing enough that you mistakenly referred to the structure as the "Liberty Tower."

But within hours it was also revealed that authorities in Los Angeles had had no idea you were going to make any of the details - whether serious or fanciful - public.

Who terrorized Southern California that day, Mr. Bush?

A year ago next month, the Los Angeles Times quoted a source - identified only by the labyrinthine description "a US official familiar with the operational aspects of the war on terrorism" - who insisted that the purported "Library Tower plot" was one of many al-Qaeda operations that had not gotten very far past the conceptual stage.

The former staff director of counterterrorism for the National Security Council, Roger Cressey - now a news analyst for NBC News and MSNBC - puts it a little more bluntly.

In our conversation, he put the "Library Tower story" into a category he called the "What-Ifs" - as in the old "Saturday Night Live" sketches that tested the range of comic absurdity:

What if ... Superman had worked for the Nazis?

What if ... Spartacus had had a Piper Cub during the battle against the Romans in 70 BC.?

More ominously, the LA Times source who debunked the Library Tower story said that those who could correctly measure the flimsiness of the scheme "feared political retaliation for providing a different characterization of the plan than that of the president."

But Mr. Bush, you're the decider.

And you decided that the Library Tower story should be scored as one for you.

And you continued with a second dubious claim of counterterror success. "We broke up a Southeast Asian terror cell grooming operatives for attacks inside the United States," you said.

Well, sir, you've apparently stumped the intelligence community completely with this one.

In his article, Mr. Swanson suggests that in the last week, there has been no reporting even hinting at what exactly you were talking about.

He hypothesizes that either you were claiming credit for a ring broken up in 1995 or that this was just the Library Tower story "by another name."

Another CIA source suggests to NBC News that since the Southeast Asian cell dreamed of a series of attacks on the same day, you declared the Library Tower one threat thwarted, and all their other ideas, a second threat thwarted.

Our colleague Mr. Cressey sums it up:

This "Southeast Asian cell" was indeed the tale of the Library Tower, simply repeated.

Repeated, Mr. Bush, in consecutive sentences in the State of the Union - in your constitutionally mandated status report on the condition and safety of the nation.

You showed us the same baby twice and claimed it was twins.

And then you said that was two for you.

Your third claim, sir, read thusly: "We uncovered an al-Qaeda cell developing anthrax to be used in attacks against America."

Again, the professionals in counterintelligence were startled to hear about this.

Last fall, two Washington Post articles cited sources in the FBI and other governmental agencies who said that hopes by foreign terrorists to use anthrax in this country were fanciful at best, farcical at worst.

And every effort to link the 2001 anthrax mailings in this country to foreign sources has also struck out. The entire investigation is barely still active.

Mr. Cressey goes a little further. Anything that might even resemble an al-Qaeda cell "developing anthrax," he says, was in the "dreaming" stages.

He used as a parallel those pathetic arrests outside Miami last year in which a few men wound up getting charged as terrorists because they couldn't tell the difference between an al-Qaeda operative and an FBI informant.

Their "ringleader" seemed to be much more interested in getting his "terrorist masters" to buy him a new car than in actually terrorizing anybody.

That's three for you, Mr. Bush.

"And just last August," you concluded, "British authorities uncovered a plot to blow up passenger planes bound for America over the Atlantic Ocean."

In a series of dramatic raids, 24 men were arrested.

Turned out, sir, a few of them actually had gone on the Internets to check out some flight schedules.

Turned out, sir, only a few of them actually had the passports needed to even get on the planes.

The plot to which President Bush referred was a plot without bombs.

It was a plot without any indication that the essence of the operation - the in-flight mixing of volatile chemicals carried on board in sports drink bottles - was even doable by amateurs or professional chemists.

It was a plot even without sufficient probable cause.

A third of the 24 arrested that day - exactly 90 days before the American midterm elections - have since been released.

The British had been watching those men for a year.

Before the week was out, their first statement, that the plot was "ready to go, in days," had been rendered inoperative.

British officials told NBC News of the lack of passports and plans; told us that they had wanted to keep the suspects under surveillance for at least another week.

Even an American official confirmed to NBC's investigative unit that there was "disagreement over the timing."

The British then went further. Sources inside their government told the English newspaper The Guardian that the raids had occurred only because the Pakistanis had arrested a man named Rasheed Raouf.

That Raouf had been arrested by Pakistan only because we had threatened to do it for them.

That the British had acted only because our government was willing - to quote that newspaper, The Guardian - to "ride roughshod" over the plans of British intelligence.

Oh, by the way, Mr. Bush, an anti-terrorism court in Pakistan reduced the charges against Mr. Raouf to possession of bomb-making materials and being there without proper documents.

Still, sir - evidently, that's close enough.

Score four for you!

Your totally black-and-white conclusions in the State of the Union were based on one gray area, and on three palettes on which the experts can't even see smudge, let alone gray.

It would all be laughable, Mr. Bush, were you not the president of the United States.

It would all be political hyperbole, Mr. Bush, if you had not, on this kind of "intelligence," taken us to war, now sought to escalate that war, and threatened new war in Iran and maybe even elsewhere.

What you gave us a week ago tonight, sir, was not intelligence, but rather a walk-through of how speculation and innuendo, guesswork and paranoia, daydreaming and fearmongering, combine in your mind and the minds of your government into proof of your derring-do and your success against the terrorists.

The ones who didn't have anthrax.

The ones who didn't have plane tickets or passports.

The ones who didn't have any clue, let alone any plots.

But they go now into our history books as the four terror schemes you've interrupted since 9/11.

They go into the collective consciousness as firm evidence of your diligence, of the necessity of your ham-handed treatment of our liberties, of the unavoidability of the 3,075 Americans dead in Iraq.

Congratulations, sir.

You are the hero of "Jaws 2."

You have kept the Piper Cub out of the hands of Spartacus.

 

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What You May Have Missed This past Week

From TomDispatch

Beyond Oral Sex

The Bush Investigations
By David Swanson and Jonathan Schwarz

The last time Congress was controlled by the party in opposition to the White House, we all learned more than we cared to know about the uses of cigars. This time the need for investigations is much more serious. The Democrats are talking fast and furious about doing them, but they're not talking about doing the right ones -- and a month into their tenure, they've barely discovered where the bathrooms are.

As humorist Bob Harris enjoys saying about the Bush administration, "It's like a new Watergate every day with these people." Congress could probably spend three decades profitably examining the last six years of the Bush administration. Unfortunately, they'll have to do severe triage to select the areas of malfeasance where investigations will most benefit the country.

   The question is, what do they investigate first and how deep do the committees delve into the Bush administration. do they take things seriously enough to issue subpoena the Bush clan if there is no co-operation?

    The Democrats are hesitant with the subpoena power and they should not be, as the Bush Crime Family needs to be held accountable for their actions and criminal activities.

   Grow some balls, Democrats!

                                            * * * *

    Here is a nice little report/article from Steve Hammons, a guest contributor at TruthOut, on the future Bush, Cheney plans for Iran.

 

Will Bush, Cheney Attack Iran? When and Why?
By Steve Hammons
truthout

Friday 02 February 2007

Despite recent election results reflecting Americans' concerns about the Iraq War and related matters, will George W. Bush, Dick Cheney and their associates choose to use US military forces to attack Iran?

Or, maybe the correct question is: When will they choose to attack? April? March? February?

Many intelligent observers, some with inside information, have reported that the Bush administration and a certain group of their supporters have been planning to attack Iran for some time.             MORE

   If you would like to read more opinion on the up-coming war with Iran and the White House spin to produce this war, then go here, here and then see this video with Keith Olbermann.

                              IMPEACH! INDICT! IMPRISON!

 

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Bush to Speak To Democrats At Their Annual Retreat

   Today, Saturday, should be an interesting day for President Bush as he goes into the lions den to address the U.S. House of Representatives Democrats at their annual retreat. This is the first time that Bush has done this in his six years as 'Idiot in Chief'.

    When Bush is finished speaking, he and the Democrats will have a private meeting so that the newly placed House and Senate can question the president.

Reuters )- By Richard Cowan Feb 3,2007

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (news, bio, voting record) has chosen five fellow Democrats to quiz Bush, and the Iraq war is expected to be high on their agenda.

"The war, the war, the war," Pelosi told reporters on Friday when asked what rank-and-file Democrats had on their minds at the retreat.

   I'm wondering if Speaker Pelosi and the other five interrogators plan on slapping Bush around a bit in order to get him to open his ears. He and his Vice Idiot (Cheney) have said that they will do with the war as they please, no matter what the Congress or the American people think

    I see Bush probably trying to work out some sly deal so that the Iraq war funding stays intact and I do not see Bush as caring all to much about the health care, immigration, and energy agenda that he so proudly spoke of in his State of the Union speech last month.

     He's had six years to deal with these issues and he's only mentioning them to appease the Democrats so that he can keep his Iraq/Iran war funding from drying up.

For all the talk of bipartisanship, six years of political infighting between Democrats and Bush has taken a toll. Some House Democrats have been asking, "Why is he (Bush) coming" to their retreat, Hoyer said.

 

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Friday, February 02, 2007

U.S. Helicopter Downed On Friday

    We all know about the U.S. helicopters that have been getting shot down at a quick pace in the last 2 weeks and the fact that the Bush administration is mostly blaming the Iranians for supplying newer weapons to the Iraqi insurgents to use against the U.S. and other groups.

    We are all used to Bush's rhetoric when it comes to blaming the wrong groups and people for various things and as of yet he has not shown any proof to lay on the Iranians door step. Cherry picking the false facts must be getting tough for him and his group of hoods.

   Anyway, while I was going through some articles that I keep on disk, I ran across this story from back in December.

Original Article

 Saudis reportedly funding Iraqi Sunni insurgents
Updated 12/8/2006 

CAIRO (AP) — Private Saudi citizens are giving millions of dollars to Sunni insurgents in Iraq and much of the money is used to buy weapons, including shoulder fired anti-aircraft missiles, according to key Iraqi officials and others familiar with the flow of cash.

Saudi government officials deny that any money from their country is being sent to Iraqis fighting the government and the U.S.-led coalition.

But the U.S. Iraq Study Group report said Saudis are a source of funding for Sunni Arab insurgents. Several truck drivers interviewed by The Associated Press described carrying boxes of cash from Saudi Arabia into Iraq, money they said was headed for insurgents.

Two high-ranking Iraqi officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the issue's sensitivity, told the AP most of the Saudi money comes from private donations, called zaqat, collected for Islamic causes and charities.

   The White House has never pointed their rhetoric in the Saudi direction even though this rumor/story has persisted for quite some time.

 

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Michigan's Issue Over Same-Sex Benefits

   On Friday,a writer at Daily Kos known as Trapper John,  did an article on the bigotry of a same-sex amendment which passed in Michigan back in 2004.But that was not the point of the article, this was:

 The Wages of Bigotry

by Trapper John
Fri Feb 02, 2007 at 01:10:07 PM PST

Actions have consequences, though, and the people of Michigan are about to realize that their 2004 vote to prohibit same-sex marriage did, in fact, relegate an entire class of citizens to permanent second-class status.  Because the Michigan Court of Appeals held today that the gay marriage ban also bans same-sex domestic partner benefits.

"The marriage amendment's plain language prohibits public employers from recognizing same-sex unions for any purpose," the court wrote.

A constitutional amendment passed by Michigan voters in November 2004 made the union between a man and a woman the only agreement recognized as a marriage "or similar union for any purpose." Those six words led to the court fight over benefits for gay couples.  Gay couples and others had argued that the public intended to ban gay marriage but not block benefits for unmarried opposite sex or same-sex domestic partners.

The appeals court agreed with the Michigan attorney general, Republican Mike Cox, who said in a March 2005 opinion that same-sex benefits are not allowed in a state that does not recognize same-sex unions.   The Article

   It is an article that I would think that you should read.

    My thinking is, What's the big deal? I think that it makes alot of sense that if you are banning same-sex unions then the same-sex benefits should be dis-allowed also.

   At this same time, heterosexuals who are not married should not be receiving the benefits either. Living with a boyfriend or a girlfriend does not make you a union.

 

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Iraq and Bush's Lies on the Escalation

A new report  by the Congressional Budget Office found that the administration's request for just over 20,000 combat troops would require a deployment of as many as 28,000 additional personnel, including support and logistics troops and contractors

On Bush's sending an additional 20,000 troops to Iraq we have this from the Washington Post,

"That could mean the plan would involve up to 48,000 troops and contractors, at a cost of between $9 billion and $13 billion for the first four months and up to $27 billion for the first year." The report contradicts testimony given Congress just last week by the Army Chief of Staff.

   I guess that Bush conveniently forgot the extras that would be needed for this fiasco. Of course, Bush also understated the cost of this escalation by saying that it would only cost some $3 billion.

Equipment For Added Troops Is Lacking

New Iraq Forces Must Make Do, Officials Say

By Ann Scott Tyson

Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, January 30, 2007

Boosting U.S. troop levels in Iraq by 21,500 would create major logistical hurdles for the Army and Marine Corps, which are short thousands of vehicles, armor kits and other equipment needed to supply the extra forces, U.S. officials said.

The increase would also further degrade the readiness of U.S.-based ground forces, hampering their ability to respond quickly, fully trained and well equipped in the case of other military contingencies around the world and increasing the risk of U.S. casualties, according to Army and Marine Corps leaders.

       "New Iraqi Forces Must Make Do," is what the officials are saying.

    They will not have the armor, vehicles or equipment needed. I wonder, will our people have the bullets for their machine guns and so forth?

   Somebody needs to slap that bitch up in the White House up beside his damned head and wake him the fuck up! Sending under -equipped troops into war is like going to a gun fight with a knife as your weapon!

    What planet is this dumbass living on because it sure the hell is not planet earth? This piece of slime needs to go and crawl back under his rock so someone can step on it!

                               IMPEACH! INDICT! IMPRISON!

 

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Legal and Human Rights Groups Issue Open Letter Warning Of Illegality Of any Offensive Military Action By U.S. Against Iran

   From Commondreams.Org we have this wonderful piece on human rights groups and other issuing a letter on the illegality of military action against Iran.

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
FEBRUARY 1, 2007
11:57 AM

CONTACT: National Lawyers Guild
212 679-5100

Legal And Human Rights Groups Issue Open Letter Warning Of Illegality Of Any Offensive Military Action By U.S. Against Iran

WASHINGTON - February 1 - Today European, international and United States legal and human rights groups issued an open letter warning of the illegality of any offensive military action by the United States against Iran. Signatories include the American Association of Jurists, Center for Constitutional Rights (U.S.), Droite Solidarite (France), European Association of Lawyers for Human Rights and Democracy, Italian Association of Democratic Lawyers, Haldane Society (United Kingdom), International Association of Democratic Lawyers, Indian Association of Lawyers, (India), Japanese Association of Lawyers for International Solidarity, (Japan), Lawyers Against War (Canada), National Lawyers Guild (U.S.), Progress Lawyers Network (Belgium).
Open Letter to All Members of Congress, the Bush Administration And the U.S. Armed Forces From Legal and Human Rights Groups
There are increasing indications that the Bush administration intends to take military action against Iran. There are also indications that the administration would support military action by Israel against Iran.
The undersigned organizations issue this Open Letter to All Members of Congress, the Administration and the U.S. Armed Forces to reiterate their affirmative duties to prevent military action and to refrain from ongoing threats to peace.
Offensive military action against Iran would be illegal, as the United States is bound under the United Nations Charter to settle international disputes by peaceful means and to refrain from the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity of any state or act in any other manner inconsistent with the purpose of the United Nations. (Article 2 sections 3 and 4). While Article 51 of the charter recognizes the inherent right of individual or collective self defense, such a right exists only if an armed attack occurs and is allowed only until the Security Council can take measures necessary to maintain international peace and security. Any other type of military action by the United States would not be in compliance with the UN Charter.
The UN Charter, as a treaty ratified by the U.S., is part of the Supreme Law of the United States under Article VI §2 of the United States Constitution. If the President and Congress fail to abide by the law as provided in the Constitution they violate their sacred oaths of office.
Any military action against Iran in the absence of a military strike by Iran would be a war of aggression outlawed under Article 2(4) of the UN Charter.
If the United States or any other nation were to act outside of its UN obligations it would risk starting a war of aggression and committing a crime against peace. Furthermore, the sending of aircraft carriers combined with recent threatening statements constitutes a threat to wage a war with Iran. This is also prohibited by the Charter. Principle VI of the Nuremberg Principles also makes crimes against peace punishable under international law. Crimes against peace include: planning, preparation, initiation or waging a war of aggression in violation of international treaties, agreements, or assurances, or participation in a common plan or conspiracy to accomplish these acts.
The United States and all countries that have ratified the UN Charter are required to abide by their obligations under it. It is in the interests of all countries of the world that the United Nations be a viable multilateral institution capable of carrying out the mission of its charter to preserve peace and promote development and human rights. Actions which violate that charter undermine it. Actions by the U.S. which violate the charter prevent the UN from acting effectively; they also undermine the credibility of the United States in the world community. The U.S. cannot demand that other countries obey the terms of the UN Charter while it is violating those very provisions with impunity.
The War Powers Act, which requires congressional approval of military action, must be read consistently with our obligations under the UN Charter and international law not to engage in wars of aggression. We urge:
1. The President, Vice President, and all other members of the Bush administration who have a decision-making role with regard to taking military action in Iran, to immediately renounce such efforts to engage in this war;
2. The members of the military to refuse any requests by the administration to invade or take other military action against Iran in light of the illegality of such actions; and
3. That Congress immediately pass a binding resolution reaffirming the United States’ legal obligations and informing the President and the administration that it will not concur in any invasion of or military action against Iran, would refuse to approve funding for any such military action, and would consider actions taken in contravention of the resolution as impeachable offenses.
The American Association of Jurists
Vanessa Ramos, Secretary General, vramos1565 at aol.com
Clea Carpi da Rocha, President, carpi at pro.via-rs.com.br
Beinusz Szmukler, szmukler at ciudad.com.ar
The Center for Constitutional Rights
Vincent Warren, Executive Director, vwarren at ccr-ny.org
Bill Goodman, Legal Director, bgoodman at ccr-ny.org
Droite Solidarite
Roland Weyl, President, mrwjur at club-internet.fr
European Association of Lawyers for Democracy and Human Rights
RA Thomas Schmid, Secretary General, ra-th-schmidt at t-online.dem
Professor Bill Bowring, b.bowring at bbk.ac.uk
Haldane Society, United Kingdom
Liz Davies, liz at lizdavies.demon.co.uk
International Association of Democratic Lawyers
Jitendra Sharma, President, jsharma at vsnl.com
Jeanne Mirer, Secretary General, mirerfam at earthlink.net
Indian Association of Lawyers
Mr. G.K.Bansal, General Secretary, gkb at gkbco.com
Mr. T.M.Mohammed Youseff, General Secretary, youseffdelhi at gmail.com
Italian Association of Democratic Lawyers
Fabio Marcelli, fabio.marcelli at isgi.cnr.it
Japanese Association of Lawyers for International Solidarity, Japan
Osamu Niikura, Secretary General, oniikura at als.aoyama.ac.jp
Lawyers Against the War, Canada
Gail Davidson, Chair, law at portal.ca
National Lawyers Guild
Marjorie Cohn, President, libertad48 at san.rr.com
Progress Lawyers Network, Belgium
Jan Fermon, jan.fermon at progresslaw.net

 

Florida Going To Paper Ballots For 2008

   Since it all started in Florida back in the 2000 presidential appointment, it is only appropriate that the state of Florida would now shift to a voting system of casting paper ballots over the touch-screen system now in use.

   The paper ballots will be counted by a scanning machine and the system will be ready just in time for the 2008 elections, according to The New York Times.

By ABBY GOODNOUGH and CHRISTOPHER DREW
Published: February 2, 2007

Voting experts said Florida’s move, coupled with new federal voting legislation expected to pass this year, could be the death knell for the paperless electronic touch-screen machines. If as expected the Florida Legislature approves the $32.5 million cost of the change, it would be the nation’s biggest repudiation yet of touch-screen voting, which was widely embraced after the 2000 recount as a state-of-the-art means of restoring confidence that every vote would count.

NYTimes Article

 

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Holding Bush Back from Attacking Iran

By Marjorie Cohn, Alter Net  Posted February 2, 2007.

Bush will not likely ask permission to make war on Iran, and it's up to Congress to stop him

 Bush is rattling the sabers and opting for gunboat diplomacy by pledging to "seek out and destroy" Iranian networks "providing advanced weaponry and training to our enemies" in Iraq. But he has produced no hard evidence that Iran is supplying forces in Iraq with such weapons or manufacturing their own nuclear weapons.

On Tuesday, the administration stepped up its inflammatory rhetoric. US officials said Iranians may have trained attackers who killed five Americans in Karbala on January 20. They also implicated the Mahdi Army, the militia controlled by Moktada al-Sadr. It's very interesting that the New York Times characterized the focus on Iran and the Mahdi Army as "convenient from the point of view of the Bush administration."

Investigators were stumped at how the attackers, who wore American-style uniforms, secured forged US identity cards and American-style M-4 rifles, and used stun grenades like those used only by US forces. They are also confounded at the way the attackers' convoy of S.U.V.'s gave the impression that it was American and slipped through Iraqi checkpoints. Wednesday's article in the Times cites a theory that "a Western mercenary group" may have been involved. In the past the US government used the CIA to covertly overthrow governments, such as Iran's in 1953 and Chile's in 1973. Could mercenaries now be doing the Bush administration's dirty work?                Entire Article

   I actually have no comment on this story as we all know that Bush has been full of shit from the day he first stepped into office. Nothing that this devil does or has done by others can surprise me anymore.

    It is up to our congress to get off of their asses and to stop this clown from getting us all attacked and killed by the many countries that have grown to dislike the United States because of this asshole.

    In case you did not know it, many foreign countries think that the American people approve of Bush since you re-elected him a second time. This makes it look as if he has the American citizens support in all that he does. NOT a good thing!

 

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NIE on Iraq Presented To President Bush

Entire Article

By Karen DeYoung and Walter Pincus

Washington Post Staff Writers
Friday, February 2, 2007

A long-awaited National Intelligence Estimate on Iraq, presented to President Bush by the intelligence community yesterday, outlines an increasingly perilous situation in which the United States has little control and there is a strong possibility of further deterioration, according to sources familiar with the document.

The document emphasizes that although al-Qaeda activities in Iraq remain a problem, they have been surpassed by Iraqi-on-Iraqi violence as the primary source of conflict and the most immediate threat to U.S. goals. Iran, which the administration has charged with supplying and directing Iraqi extremists, is mentioned but is not a focus.

    So we are in Iraq helping the Iraqis gain democracy and doing battle with al-Qaeda which has become less of a threat there because the Iraqis cannot get along with each other!

    This is becoming Bush's worst nightmare and I see it getting worse than anything that we saw with Vietnam. I think that President Bush likes his nightmare as he continues to stay in it.

 

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Attempted Bribes To Scientist To Dispute Climate Study

   It looks as if attempts were made to bribe scientist into disputing the a report from the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).

  The Guardian

Scientists and economists have been offered $10,000 each by a lobby group funded by one of the world's largest oil companies to undermine a major climate change report due to be published today.

Letters sent by the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), an ExxonMobil-funded thinktank with close links to the Bush administration, offered the payments for articles that emphasise the shortcomings of a report from the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).

The AEI has received more than $1.6m from ExxonMobil and more than 20 of its staff have worked as consultants to the Bush administration. Lee Raymond, a former head of ExxonMobil, is the vice-chairman of AEI's board of trustees.

   Have you noticed a pattern here? Every time something illegal and crooked is exposed in the past few years,as far as governments are concerned, the guilty are all friends of the Bush administration.

   This administration will stoop as low as they possibly can to get their way. Their way should be the highway and ExxonMobil should be prosecuted, if possible.

 

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Thursday, February 01, 2007

Warner/Levin Resolution a Mistake

    I noted in a previous post that this non-binding resolution was a waste of time and effort on the part of the Democrat Party.

   You all know that Senator Russ Feingold does not care for this piece of crap and apparently a few other Democrats do not either. They would rather see a binding resolution with some bite in it.

   Senator Feingold posted on Daily Kos on Thursday with his views on this subject and i am posting the entire letter on this site.

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Warner/Levin Resolution a Mistake

by Senator Russ Feingold
Thu Feb 01, 2007 at 01:25:46 PM PST

When the Senate Foreign Relations Committee took up the Biden-Hagel resolution opposing the President’s troop escalation proposal last week, I supported it as a first step toward ending our involvement in this war.  That resolution didn’t go nearly far enough – it was nonbinding and just focused on the escalation – but putting the Senate on record against the "surge" was a small step in the right direction.  

Unfortunately, the new Warner-Levin resolution that many Democrats are pushing is flawed and unacceptable.  It rejects the surge, but it also misunderstands the situation in Iraq and endorses the President’s underlying approach.  It’s basically a back-door authorization of the President’s misguided policies, and passing it would be a big mistake.  Under the guise of constructive criticism, the Warner-Levin resolution signs off on  the President continuing indefinite military operations in Iraq that will not address the fundamental political challenges in Iraq, and that continue to distract us from developing a comprehensive and global approach to the threats that face our nation.  

Here’s a link to the resolution so everyone knows what we’re talking about.  I’m going to pass over the first finding, which salutes the President as "Commander in Chief."  And I’m not going to focus on finding (16), which salutes the muddled and wishy-washy report of the Iraq Study Group as "valuable."  Instead, I’m going to focus on section 22 of the findings, which is nothing short of an endorsement of the status quo in Iraq and that is simply unacceptable.  It rejects exactly what is most needed in Iraq – an "immediate reduction in, or withdrawal of, the present level of forces."  If you vote for this resolution, you are voting against redeploying troops from Iraq.  This resolution doesn’t fix the administration’s failed Iraq policy – it just takes us back to where we were before the escalation.  It’s not enough to reject the "surge" if you aren’t willing to support a plan for redeploying our troops.    

It’s all downhill from there in (b)2.  The resolution goes on to support "continuing[ing] vigorous operations in Anbar province, specifically for the purpose of combating an insurgency."  Apparently, some people think that our troops should be involved in putting down the Sunni insurgency in western Iraq.  Actually, the President’s policy of maintaining a massive, open-ended military presence in Iraq has been inflaming the insurgency in that country from the start.  I support the idea of targeted counter-terrorism missions to take out terrorist elements in Iraq, but we shouldn’t ask our brave troops to remain there to put down an Iraqi insurgency any more than we can expect them to end Shi’ite-Sunni sectarian conflict in Baghdad.  

That’s why I introduced legislation this week to use Congress’s power of the purse to end our military involvement in Iraq.  I was greeted with a tremendous response from this community.  I’m extremely grateful for it because it was evidence of how badly change is both wanted and needed.  But how does the Warner/Levin resolution change anything?  We owe it to ourselves to demand action that will bring about change in Iraq, not take us back to a failed status quo.  

Democrats in Congress have seemingly forgotten that we were in power when Congress authorized the President to go to war in Iraq.  Supporting a de facto reauthorization puts us in serious jeopardy of repeating that mistake.  We also have to remember that in November, Americans sent over 30 new Democratic Representatives and eight new Democratic Senators plus a very progressive Independent to fix a failed Iraq policy.  The public is craving change in Iraq and a resolution like this one will not cut it.  Now is the time for strong action.  

Some have argued that any legislative vehicle that could be spun as a rejection of the President’s policies would be worth supporting.  I understand that strategy, and it may sound good to some.  But when all the spinning is done, what we are left with is the actual text of the legislation, which is an endorsement of the open-ended commitment of the U.S. military in Iraq.

It’s time for Congress to end our military involvement in this war.  We must redeploy our troops from Iraq so that we can focus on the global threats that face us.

**UPDATE** - 5:58 pm

Thanks to everyone who has responded so far.  I tell my colleagues in the Senate all the time about the hunger I see in this community, in my listening sessions in Wisconsin, and around the country, for real change.  All of this is happening today amidst reports that the CBO is predicting the President will need significantly more troops for his escalation than what the White House is publicly saying.  I understand how important it is to send a clear message to the White House.  But we shouldn’t make the compromises made in this resolution just to beat a filibuster.  Instead of trying to pass something that everyone can get behind, we should be taking a strong stand.  If others want to block it, go right ahead.  We have the support of a majority of Americans behind us.  We should recognize that and act on it.  Thank you again.  I really appreciate the encouragement.

 

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Resistance to War Cannot be Jailed

Published on Thursday, February 1, 2007 by the Seattle Post-Intelligencer (Washington)    Crossposted from Common Dreams

by Amy Goodman

You can jail the resisters, but you can't jail the resistance. George W. Bush, take notice as U.S. Army Lt. Ehren Watada is court-martialed next week. Congress, take heed. Young people in harm's way are leading the way out of Iraq. It is time you followed.

Watada was the first commissioned officer to refuse deployment to Iraq. He joined the military in March 2003. He believed President Bush's claims that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction, connections to 9/11 and al-Qaida, and that Iraq was an imminent threat to the United States.

After signing on, he studied intensively to be well prepared to lead troops in Iraq. His studies, and the daily news coming out of Iraq of civilian deaths and no WMD, led him to the conclusion that the war was not only immoral, but also illegal.

On June 6, 2006, Watada said: "My moral and legal obligation is to the Constitution and not to those who would issue unlawful orders. ... As the order to take part in an illegal act is ultimately unlawful as well, I must, as an officer of honor and integrity, refuse that order."

He refused to deploy. The Army charged Watada with missing the troop movement, contempt toward officials and conduct unbecoming an officer. Watada hoped that his court-martial would be a hearing on the legality of the war. He was not claiming conscientious objection; rather, he says, he simply refused an illegal order. He offered to resign his commission. He offered to serve in Afghanistan. The Army refused his offers. A military judge ruled Watada cannot present evidence challenging the war's legality or explain what motivated him to resist his deployment order.      Read More Here

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Lt.Watada did the right thing even by legal standards and now he risk doing time for not following illegal orders given to him by his superiors.

That trail leads all the way up to our President. Don't allow the punishment of Lt.Watada to go on like this. If anyone should be punished, it would be the individuals who have started this illegal war in the first place.

                         IMPEACH! INDICT! IMPRISON!

 

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Former R.I. Sen. John Celona Sentenced for Payoffs

John Celona(D), former Senator from Rhode Island was sentenced on Wednesday to 2½ years in federal prison for taking payoffs.

    From the Associated Press:

By Eric Tucker
Associated Press Writer
February 1, 2007

John Celona admitted he abused his position as chairman of a key legislative committee to benefit the drugstore chain CVS Corp., Roger Williams Medical Center and Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Rhode Island.                                       

Prosecutors said the former state senator was paid nearly $320,000 for the favorable treatment.                           

Celona, 53, pleaded guilty in 2005 to three counts of federal mail fraud and cooperated with investigators. He testified as the star witness last fall in a trial that produced convictions of two former hospital executives.                                 

Assistant U.S. Attorney Gerard Sullivan told the judge that Celona's extensive cooperation has led the investigation to seven politicians and seven corporations. Sullivan did not identify anyone being investigated but said FBI agents from other cities have been transferred to Rhode Island to help with the probe.   The Article

  

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Bush:Nation Depends on 'Almighty God'

CBN News
February 1, 2007

CBNNews.com -- President Bush today recognized the nation's dependence on "almighty God."

He made that comment at the National Prayer Breakfast in Washington.

Guest speaker, Dr. Francis Collins, the mapper of the human genetic code, said he dares to believe in God.

The chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, General Peter Pace, also spoke.

He said it's his experience that few leave battle with any doubt that God exists.

President Bush called the nation to pray for the safety of America's troops.

   With two more years before our Idiot in Chief is out of the White House, this country needs all of the help from 'Almighty God' that it can get, as do our troops over in Iraq.

   It scares me when Bush mentions God in any speech or any other statement that he makes.

 

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Senate Passes Minimum Wage Increase To $7.25

    On Thursday, the Senate voted to up the federal minimum wage rate to $7.25 per hour over a two year period. the bill was loaded with some controversial tax cuts for small businesses and some higher taxes for $1 million-plus executives.

   The first wage increase in 10 years was approved by a 94-3 vote.

     From Associated Press;

"Passing this wage hike represents a small but necessary step to help lift America's working poor out of the ditches of poverty and onto the road toward economic prosperity," said Sen. Edward Kennedy ( bio, voting record), D-Mass.

The bill must now be reconciled with the House version passed Jan. 10 that contained no tax provisions. House Democrats have insisted they want a minimum wage bill with no strings attached, though some have conceded the difficulty of passing the legislation in the Senate without tax breaks.

"Of course, Democrats would prefer to pass a clean increase in the minimum wage," said the spokesman, Jim Manley. "The fact is that Republicans have made it very clear that the only way we will pass a modest increase in the minimum wage is with tax breaks for small business."

   It is worth noting that the GOP did not get all the tax breaks that they have wanted in earlier wage increase bills.

    It still seems stupid that small business should get a tax break just for paying a better living wage to their employees, which is still not enough to live on in the first place. If you want less people living on the government system, pay them enough to stay out of the system in the first place. $7.25 an hour 2 years from now doesn't cut it!

 

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Senate Passes Minimum Wage Increase To $7.25

    On Thursday, the Senate voted to up the federal minimum wage rate to $7.25 per hour over a two year period. the bill was loaded with some controversial tax cuts for small businesses and some higher taxes for $1 million-plus executives.

   The first wage increase in 10 years was approved by a 94-3 vote.

     From Associated Press;

"Passing this wage hike represents a small but necessary step to help lift America's working poor out of the ditches of poverty and onto the road toward economic prosperity," said Sen. Edward Kennedy ( bio, voting record), D-Mass.

The bill must now be reconciled with the House version passed Jan. 10 that contained no tax provisions. House Democrats have insisted they want a minimum wage bill with no strings attached, though some have conceded the difficulty of passing the legislation in the Senate without tax breaks.

"Of course, Democrats would prefer to pass a clean increase in the minimum wage," said the spokesman, Jim Manley. "The fact is that Republicans have made it very clear that the only way we will pass a modest increase in the minimum wage is with tax breaks for small business."

   It is worth noting that the GOP did not get all the tax breaks that they have wanted in earlier wage increase bills.

    It still seems stupid that small business should get a tax break just for paying a better living wage to their employees, which is still not enough to live on in the first place. If you want less people living on the government system, pay them enough to stay out of the system in the first place. $7.25 an hour 2 years from now doesn't cut it!

 

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Alan Mollohan Should Resign His Chair

   Let us meet  congressman Alan Mollohan (D-W.VA.)

    This man has been under investigation  by the F.B.I. for some real estate deals and a few other things dealing with non-profits which look to have made quite a bit of cash for alot of people.

   He also chairs the House panel which controls the Justice Department budget (including the FBI).  TPM

   The Democratic Party does not need this man chairing any kind of panel until this legal mess of his is cleared up. The party does not need to begin its term with shit like this popping up right from the start. Let's not go GOP on this and just let it slide and hope that it goes away. Mollohan needs to go away for the time being.

 

 

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Bush Signing Statements To Be Investigated

   Bush and his massive amount of signing statements are finally being looked into by the House as the new chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, John Conyers Jr. said that he is launching an investigation into whether the Bush Crime Family (my words) has violated any laws that it has ignored by using the signing statements to get around those laws.

    The Bush Crime Family has worked around more than 1,100 laws since he took office.

Crossposted from CommonDreams

Published on Thursday, February 1, 2007 by the Boston Globe

House Panel Probing Bush's Record on Signing Statements

by Charlie Savage

WASHINGTON - The new chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, John Conyers Jr. of Michigan, said yesterday that he is launching an aggressive investigation into whether the Bush administration has violated any of the laws it claimed a right to ignore in presidential "signing statements."

Bush has claimed that his executive powers allow him to bypass more than 1,100 laws enacted since he took office. But administration officials insist that Bush's signing statements merely question the laws' constitutionality, and do not necessarily mean that the president also authorized his subordinates to violate them.

Conyers said the president has no power " to ignore duly enacted laws he has negotiated with Congress and signed." And he vowed to find out whether the administration has followed each law it challenged -- including laws touching on classified national security matters, such as the tactics used to interrogate suspected terrorists and the FBI's use of the Patriot Act.

"This is a constitutional issue that no self-respecting federal legislature should tolerate," Conyers said, and he added that the committee was determined to "get to the bottom of this matter, and to be blunt, we are not going to take no for an answer."     Entire Article

 

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Iran,Iraq And the Rest Of The Bullshit

     The following is a brief tour of what's up with the White house and the middle east.

From Dailykos

How To Start A War

by Devilstower
Thu Feb 01, 2007

Suppose you wanted to start a war.  Forget for a second about why you might want to do this.  Maybe you're trying to distract the public from the disastrous way in which you handled your last conflict.  Maybe you are still intent on fulfilling your messianic vision of yourself as reshaper of the Middle East and bringer of the Apocalypse.  Maybe you're just an ass.  Who can say?  But if you wanted to start this war, can you name some steps you might take?  

How about blaming your opponent for all your troubles, even when you know they're not responsible for all, or even most, of what you're seeing?     Entire Article

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Entire Article

Kirkuk: The Next Civil War?

by BarbinMD
Thu Feb 01, 2007

Buried near the bottom of Iraq's Constitution, it says that:

...the Transitional Administrative Law shall extend and continue to the executive authority elected in accordance with this constitution, provided that it completes (normalization and census and concludes with a referendum in Kirkuk and other disputed territories to determine the will of their citizens), in a period not to exceed (the thirty first of December two thousand and seven). 

 

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S.D. Legislator Fondled An 18 Year Old Page?

   It's beginning to look as if the second coming of Foley is upon us once again, only in a motel room this time!

Original Article

S.D. legislator censured for misconduct

By CHET BROKAW, Associated Press Writer
Wed Jan 31,2007

PIERRE, S.D. - The South Dakota Senate on Wednesday refused to expel a lawmaker accused of fondling an 18-year-old legislative page in a motel bed, but voted to censure him instead.

Democratic Sen. Dan Sutton had admitted sharing a bed with the page last winter but denied groping him.

 

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Federal Judge Puts 16 Guantanamo Cases On Hold

    Crossposted from The Huffington Post

Associated Press | Posted January 31, 2007

Sixteen lawsuits by Guantanamo Bay detainees were put on hold Wednesday by a federal judge who said he may no longer have jurisdiction to hear their cases.

U.S. District Court Judge Reggie B. Walton in Washington said the Military Commissions Act, signed into law in October, has left him unable to consider whether the detainees can challenge being held at the Navy facility in Cuba         Original Story

   So it took this judge 3 months to come to this conclusion? I'd bet that the White house pressured him into this finding by threatening with an early retirement or disappearance.

 

 

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Senate Reaches Compromise On Bush troop Plan

    So the Democrat and Republican Senators reached a compromise on Wednesday on the non-binding resolution against Bush's Iraq war plans.

Senators Unite On Challenge to Bush's Troop Plan

Washington Post
Thursday, February 1, 2007

Democratic and Republican opponents of President Bush's troop-buildup plan joined forces last night behind the nonbinding resolution with the broadest bipartisan backing: a Republican measure from Sen. John W. Warner of Virginia.

He added language specifically opposing a cutoff of funding for U.S. troops in a targeted appeal to Sen. Judd Gregg (R-N.H.), who had offered an identical separate measure.

But House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) went further, publicly hinting she will push binding legislation that would begin bringing U.S. troops home from Iraq. "I believe that you'll see initiatives on the floor to this effect: that we have this year in which we should be able to drastically reduce the number of troops," she said in an interview broadcast on National Public Radio yesterday.     Entire Article

     Let us examine this 'compromise' shall we?

    The new, revised resolution states the senates opposition to the Bush troop increase but at the same time it protects the troop funding. Left out of the resolution was the language that the Democrats had originally wanted inserted saying that Bush's plan is against the national interest.

The score is : GOP 2, Dems 0 in the compromise tally. Okay, we'll give the Dems 1 because Warner left out language for Senate support for more additional troops. GOP 2, Dems 1.

   I would have no problem with this resolution if not for the language opposing the cutoff of funding for our troops. This works to the GOP advantage in case the war takes an ugly turn for the worst and the Democrats then grow a spine and start hollering for a funding cutoff.

   The constitution gives the Congress the power to stop this insanity and to bring our people home and it should be done now!

    I did not vote for my candidates to make it into office and to then turn into jellyfish and to go cower in a corner. Myself and the American people put you to work to bring our men and women home! NOW! What part of that do you not understand?

    You Democrats will have a short career if you keep this shit up!

 

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