Remember change.gov? This statement still exists there:
The United States was founded on the idea that all people are endowed with inalienable rights, and that principle has allowed us to work to perfect our union at home while standing as a beacon of hope to the world. Today, that principle is embodied in agreements Americans helped forge -- the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the Geneva Conventions, and treaties against torture and genocide -- and it unites us with people from every country and culture.
The case against Bush in Switzerland is, in some ways, a commentary on law and politics in the United States. But not in the way Frum presents it. Sadly, it is a commentary on the failure of the U.S. legal system to demonstrate its strength and independence from politics. Bush has openly admitted authorizing acts that constitute torture. The case against him will be investigated and tried — if not in the United States then in a country that has the courage to give meaning to its legal obligation to investigate and prosecute torturers.
The Justice Department has taken steps to avoid the appearance of impropriety. Ethics officials have advised lawyers -- including Attorney General Eric Holder Jr. -- to recuse themselves in matters involving detainees represented by their former firms. Holder, for one, is disqualified from participating in matters involving 16 Yemeni detainees represented by his former firm, Covington and Burling. Holder never participated directly in the firm's Guantanamo work, and the American Bar Association's Rules for Professional Conduct wouldn't require a recusal in this case. Principal Deputy Solictor General Neal Katyal successfully argued Hamdan v. Bush while a professor at the Georgetown University Law Center. In Hamdan, the Supreme Court found that the Bush administration's military commissions for trying suspected terrorists violated the Uniform Code of Military Justice and the Geneva Conventions.
With Michele Batshitmann entering the Republican presidential primary, nothing would change the tone of the campaign quite like indicting a war criminal, innit? Howard Zinn tag at DemocracyNow!
American Interventionism: Protecting the Profit Machine Why America is really so concerned about the push for democracy in the Middle East. As a nation founded on invasion, occupation and genocide, America has maintained its empire by those means to this day. Read more at http://www.activistpost.com/2011/03/american-interventionism-protecting.html Richard William Posner Activist Post
After reading this and remembering Howard Zinns A People History Of the United States one realizes this b.s. has gone on far to long! There must be a peaceful way!
6 comments:
American Interventionism: Protecting the Profit Machine
Why America is really so concerned about the push for democracy in the Middle East.
As a nation founded on invasion, occupation and genocide, America has maintained its empire by those means to this day. Read more at
http://www.activistpost.com/2011/03/american-interventionism-protecting.html
Richard William Posner
Activist Post
After reading this and remembering Howard Zinns A People History Of the United States one realizes this b.s. has gone on far to long! There must be a peaceful way!
You should know that I believe there is a constitutional solution to the United Federation of Plantets.
Intervention is hope.
Planets.
Btw: I don't disagree with you; your email prompted this post so I added the Zinn link to the end.
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