The Must Do List To Save Our Republic
With a sigh of relief, I feel at least a few Americans, and perhaps the first publication in America that is widely read enough to matter, have now stated what must be done to bring us away from the brink of social ruination. It depends upon what you do next, and what the New York Times does in follow up to the editorial they published today, ... and what I do as well. I need to get off my sorry old ass and make my voice heard to achieve what the NYT has demanded, ... and they need to make it a purpose for more than an editorial headline. Generations before us have rioted and picketed and died for far less that what the NYT demands on our behalves in today's editorial.
What the NYT proscribes today is no matter of social nuance, nor some socieconomic stratogem. What they mandate in this editorial is the essential restoration of basic rights within our nation, and by our nation within the world at large. At its heart, its strongest advocates should, but will not, be the NRA, and CPAC, and latter day Goldwater Conservatives, ... for there will be no reason to own a gun if you can not speak your peace. The true conservatives in our nation and in our history were those who understood that privacy, and a right to life and liberty, in all their full richness and meaning, are what we have always fought and died for in America.
When we have fought as a nation beyond our shores it has always been to preserve these rights within our shores. We support our troops in order that they can defend our way of life, and then return from the battlefield to enjoy its full benefits when their wars are finished.
Walter Reed and the scandal developing around its mismanagment and desecration by the Executive Branch is simply another reminder that it is time for Americans to reclaim full ownership of our Nation by every means available to us under our Constitution. Privatization in the name of capitism has proved to be a bastardization of our national purpose. Halliburton and KBR don't get it, and never will, ... for there is no commitment and no oath behind any corporate interests. Give me a young private with a crew cut and a new uniform anyday over a slick suit, bald headed old fuck. I trust a young woman just out of boot camp to take care of our lifestyle, and I love a hard muscled Marine Corporal who will know that when his "Unitary Executive" commands him to arrest and imprison his fellow Americans that the Executive will have gone way too far! These men and women will be our best hope in the end, if we can not reverse these illegal and unconstitutional insults to the American Republic. The notion that citzen soldiers are our best defense to a military coup in America was something Thomas Jefferson understood that we might have forgotten.
Perhaps it is time to tighten the belly, and harden the spirit to protect what we have been granted by our mothers and fathers.
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In the event you do not receive or can not view this editorial from the New York Times from today, ... I copy its contents for your consideration and appreciation, with full and complete attribution to the Editor in Chief of that fine paper, who, in this instance, has spoken clearly and forthrightly on our behalf.
The Must-Do List
The New York Times Editorial
Published: March 4, 2007
The Bush administration’s assault on some of the founding principles of American democracy marches onward despite the Democratic victory in the 2006 elections. The new Democratic majorities in Congress can block the sort of noxious measures that the Republican majority rubber-stamped. But preventing new assaults on civil liberties is not nearly enough.
Five years of presidential overreaching and Congressional collaboration continue to exact a high toll in human lives, America’s global reputation and the architecture of democracy. Brutality toward prisoners, and the denial of their human rights, have been institutionalized; unlawful spying on Americans continues; and the courts are being closed to legal challenges of these practices.
It will require forceful steps by this Congress to undo the damage. A few lawmakers are offering bills intended to do just that, but they are only a start. Taking on this task is a moral imperative that will show the world the United States can be tough on terrorism without sacrificing its humanity and the rule of law.
Today we’re offering a list — which, sadly, is hardly exhaustive — of things that need to be done to reverse the unwise and lawless policies of President Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney. Many will require a rewrite of the Military Commissions Act of 2006, an atrocious measure pushed through Congress with the help of three Republican senators, Arlen Specter, Lindsey Graham and John McCain; Senator McCain lent his moral authority to improving one part of the bill and thus obscured its many other problems.
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Our list starts with three fundamental tasks:
Restore Habeas Corpus
Stop Illegal Spying
Ban Torture, Really
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Many of the tasks facing Congress involve the way the United States takes prisoners, and how it treats them. There are two sets of prisons in the war on terror. The military runs one set in Iraq, Afghanistan and Guantánamo Bay. The other is even more shadowy, run by the C.I.A. at secret places.
Close the C.I.A. Prisons
Account for ‘Ghost Prisoners’
Ban Extraordinary Rendition
A bill by Representative Edward Markey, Democrat of Massachusetts, would require the executive branch to list countries known to abuse and torture prisoners. No prisoner could be sent to any of them unless the secretary of state certified that the country’s government no longer abused its prisoners or offered a way to verify that a prisoner will not be mistreated. It says "diplomatic assurances" are not sufficient.
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Congress needs to completely overhaul the military prisons for terrorist suspects, starting with the way prisoners are classified. Shortly after 9/11, Mr. Bush declared all members of Al Qaeda and the Taliban to be "illegal enemy combatants" not entitled to the protections of the Geneva Conventions or American justice. Over time, the designation was applied to anyone the administration chose, including some United States citizens and the entire detainee population of Gitmo.
To address this mess, the government must:
Tighten the Definition of Combatant
Screen Prisoners Fairly and Effectively
Under legal pressure, Mr. Bush created "combatant status review tribunals," but they are a mockery of any civilized legal proceeding. They take place thousands of miles from the point of capture, and often years later. Evidence obtained by coercion and torture is permitted. The inmates do not get to challenge this evidence. They usually do not see it.
The Bush administration uses the hoary "fog of war" dodge to justify the failure to screen prisoners, saying it is not practical to do that on the battlefield. That’s nonsense. It did not happen in Afghanistan, and often in Iraq, because Mr. Bush decided just to ship the prisoners off to Gitmo.
Prisoners designated as illegal combatants are subject to trial rules out of the Red Queen’s playbook. The administration refuses to allow lawyers access to 14 terrorism suspects transferred in September from C.I.A. prisons to Guantánamo. It says that if they had a lawyer, they might say that they were tortured or abused at the C.I.A. prisons, and anything that happened at those prisons is secret.
At first, Mr. Bush provided no system of trial at the Guantánamo camp. Then he invented his own military tribunals, which were rightly overturned by the Supreme Court. Congress then passed the Military Commissions Act, which did not fix the problem. Some tasks now for Congress:
Ban Tainted Evidence
Ban Secret Evidence
Better Define ‘Classified’ Evidence
The military commission rules define this sort of secret evidence as "any information or material that has been determined by the United States government pursuant to statute, executive order or regulation to require protection against unauthorized disclosure for reasons of national security." This is too broad, even if a president can be trusted to exercise the power fairly and carefully. Mr. Bush has shown he cannot be trusted to do that.
Respect the Right to Counsel
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Beyond all these huge tasks, Congress should halt the federal government’s race to classify documents to avoid public scrutiny — 15.6 million in 2005, nearly double the 2001 number. It should also reverse the grievous harm this administration has done to the Freedom of Information Act by encouraging agencies to reject requests for documents whenever possible. Congress should curtail F.B.I. spying on nonviolent antiwar groups and revisit parts of the Patriot Act that allow this practice.
The United States should apologize to a Canadian citizen and a German citizen, both innocent, who were kidnapped and tortured by American agents.
Oh yes, and it is time to close the Guantánamo camp. It is a despicable symbol of the abuses committed by this administration (with Congress’s complicity) in the name of fighting terrorism.
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