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More of the same with Obama -- 'Change,' not likely!
by Kingfisher Sunday, Nov 9 2008, 12:11am
international / social/political / commentary

Are we able to see the nose on our collective, rustic face? A face that betrays its primitive and limited rustic heritage; a face resplendent with intellectual vacuity! Republican running mate, Sarah Palin, was unaware that Africa is a continent – it would be pointless asking the average American to name the largest nation that occupies the most well known sub-continent in the world today (India) -- you see, Palin is the norm, not the exception!

Is Bush home free?
Is Bush home free?

Over the past nine years the world has been treated to the real America – an ugly, nasty, brutal, ARROGANT nation that thought it unnecessary to mask its true intent – singular, world domination!

Not surprisingly it FAILED in that pursuit, a short history lesson may have prevented another repeat performance from yet another self-willed, overconfident, imperial pretender but impetuousness usually accompanies grandiose thought. No imperial powers survive today though Russia and China could lay claim. But even those two multi-ethnic nations see the need to cooperate in order to prosper and survive in a world of relative peace.

America should have learnt in Vietnam that people fight invaders to the last; protecting family, home and traditional lands is instinctive to humans and there is no greater outrage or call to fight than to oust an invader. Doh! ‘Read my lips,’ you mindless, morons!

But let’s not dwell on the foibles of the past but on the prospects of catastrophe and desolation in the future!

Why or where on earth would anyone, faced with overwhelming evidence to the contrary, get the idea that Obama represents “Change?”

He shifted abruptly from his grassroots support base to Big Business funding, from mild support for Palestians to the rabid embrace of AIPAC and Israel, from war is not first option to we must fight Russian ‘aggression’ (?)

It wasn’t Obama’s recent turncoat tactics that led to massive disillusionment but his choice of Joe ‘any war will do’ Biden, as running mate early in his campaign. Biden has been succinctly and accurately summed up by Timothy V. Gatto in his recent article (link below):

“.. Joe Biden, a man who never saw a war he didn’t like. The self-proclaimed Zionist that has stood with AIPAC since its inception, a man that ranks right up there with Bush when it comes to Iran and Palestine.”
If choosing Biden wasn’t enough to awaken a numbed population, what about Obama’s recent choice for Chief of Staff – look it up, and try thinking for a real change!

‘THINK,’ God forbid! Americans don’t think, they elect Presidents based on slogans, ‘rhetorical flourishes,’ catchy one liners and image – policy and thinking play no part in American elections – need we wonder why nothing ever changes?

The entire world has learnt what America actually means when it uses the words, ‘democracy, liberty and freedom’ -- one million innocent dead civilians, the ruination of a once viable state and the theft of precious OIL/energy resources. The (illegal) Iraq war is really the appropriation of the “treasure” of Iraq, to use one of Bush’s descriptions! Bush stated that publicly, as if to remind the public that denial is the best option for average Americans -- don't ask questions and in return I'll fill your tanks.

The TRUTH is UGLY too difficult and horrific for average Americans to FACE; they would rather delight in inanities, the latest example is Obama’s choice of a puppy and the history of White House pets – agreeable content to accompany breakfast! REAL unpleasant news must be avoided or given the least and most fleeting treatment while saturation methods apply to puppy choices and other mindless content – did we get it right, Rupert?

Yet the UGLY TRUTH is that children are murdered almost daily by American forces – which is front-page news in almost every independent media outlet but not in Murdoch’s mainstream media, can’t understand it!

Murdoch seems preoccupied, he is more concerned with abstract values not the REAL COST of a REAL WAR in a REAL WORLD; every job is fraught with dangers and Murdoch’s is no exception.

Murdoch is drowning in fictive fabrications and constructed narratives. The media magnate suffers that peculiar dissociation that all megalomaniacs and sociopaths openly display. He recently thought it necessary to lecture Australia on his philosophy, which Kevin ‘puppet’ Rudd has already made plain -- we wondered where the visionless Oz PM got the idea that NATO should extend to the South Pacific, ridiculous! [You pathetic pipsqueak, Rudd!]

Overlords such as Murdoch are so far removed from the consequences of their actions they become insensitive to human tragedy but we also fare from ‘down under,’ Rupert, and we volunteer to rub your removed nose in the blood that your heinous propaganda machine helps spill, you despicable criminal; our hope is that you live long enough to be held accountable for your criminal actions. In many ways you are more culpable than Cheney who is a mere Halliburton lackey – you had a choice and you made it!

Today’s newswire reports yet another civilian slaughter in Afghanistan by armed American UAVs. Perhaps inverting blame this time?

Every full tank of gas comes at the cost of innocent human blood but that fact is TOO REAL for average Americans to face so let’s demonise and dehumanise the 'other' so WE, like the NAZIS before us, are able to kill without conscience. But like the Nazis before you – YOU will be held accountable by the same sentiment and civilised principles that formulated the Geneva and other internationally ratified Conventions.

In the meantime we are offered ‘real’ change; a BLACK man in a WHITE House – that should capture the attention and distract the whole world. However, the only change apparent so far is skin colour and that accounts for nothing!

Americans love slogans so here’s a variation on an early American effort; ‘the only good American is a dead American,’ – the original was applied to the native inhabitants of the North American ‘continent’ during the White invasion.

Read some history black man, especially the lives of the champions of social justice such as Martin Luther King jr. If you are able to muster the courage and address the many wrongs of the Bush administration – you would attract, as you did initially, the overwhelming support of the people of the entire world. If you fail your name would earn the ignominy it deserves!

We are One or we are nothing!

Peace.

Political expediency or moral and Legal integrity?
Political expediency or moral and Legal integrity?

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Can Barack Obama undo Bush's tangled legal legacy?
by Marisa Taylor and Michael Doyle via quill - McClatchy Newspapers Sunday, Nov 9 2008, 8:26am

[Most people are familiar with the phrase, "the face that launched a thousand ships," which refers to the mythical beauty of Helen of Troy. Today we have the phrase, 'the LIES that resulted in a million innocent deaths," which refers to the Cheney-Bush criminal adventure in Iraq.

We know how the Troy story ends but the Cheney-Bush story is an epic in production, which has yet to run its course. From the Guantanamo Bay concentration camp, waterboarding (TORTURE) to 'extraordinary rendition', a euphemism describing kidnapping and illegal detention.

Obama faces a simple but historic decision, whether presidential administrations are above the law and Geneva Convention? Clearly they are not but after a decade of Cheney subverting the American Constitution and the Legal System, prosecuting the Bush regime may not be a simple matter. Nevertheless, Justice demands that the White House neocons are held accountable; every last one of them! It's YOUR move, Barack! Ed.]


WASHINGTON — When Barack Obama becomes president in January, he'll confront the controversial legal legacy of the Bush administration.

From expansive executive privilege to hard-line tactics in the war on terrorism, Obama must decide what he'll undo and what he'll embrace.

The stakes couldn't be higher.

On one hand, civil libertarians and other critics of the Bush administration may feel betrayed if Obama doesn't move aggressively to reverse legal policies that they believe have violated the Constitution and international law.

On the other hand, Obama risks alienating some conservative Americans and some — but by no means all — military and intelligence officials if he seeks to hold officials accountable for those expansive policies.

These are some of the legal issues confronting him:

* How does he close the Guantanamo Bay prison in Cuba? He's pledged to shutter it, but how quickly can he do so when it holds some detainees whom no administration would want to release?

* Obama has declared coercive interrogation methods such as waterboarding unconstitutional and illegal, but will his Justice Department investigate or prosecute Bush administration officials who ordered or condoned such techniques?

* Will the new administration press to learn the full extent of the Bush administration's electronic eavesdropping and data-mining activities, and will it curtail or halt some of them?

* The Bush administration exerted tight control over the Justice Department by hiring more Republican-leaning political appointees and ousting those who were viewed as disloyal. Will Obama give the department more ideological independence?

Undoing some policies will take time.

With 316 conservative appointments to the federal courts over the last eight years, Obama could attempt to tilt the courts back to the center or even to the left with his nominees. He could alter the Supreme Court's bent by replacing two or three justices who'll probably retire soon.

Civil libertarians, who feel emboldened by a Democrat in the White House, tick off a long list of what they think Obama should do as soon as he takes office. Not only should Guantanamo be closed, they say, Obama should revoke the immunity for telecommunications companies that cooperated with secret eavesdropping, ban the use of secret prisons by the CIA and investigate and perhaps prosecute administration officials for authorizing controversial interrogation methods.

Anthony D. Romero, the executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union, which has led many of the challenges to the Bush administration's terrorism policies, said Obama could take action on most of these fronts "on day one" by issuing executive orders, such as closing Guantanamo.

"Unless he acts quickly, he runs the risk of showing the American people that their hope and optimism may have been misplaced, and reinforcing people's deep-seated cynicism that it's politics as usual in D.C.," he said.

Although Obama is likely to ban waterboarding and other aggressive techniques soon after taking office, prosecuting administration officials not only would be legally challenging because legislation has granted them immunity but also would be seen by Republicans as highly divisive.

Negotiating that minefield may be among the most difficult legal dilemmas Obama faces early in his administration because of pressure from the left and the right.

"There will be hell to pay if people are prosecuted," said Sanford Levinson, a University of Texas law professor. "But there'll be hell to pay if they just walk away scot-free."

He predicted that Obama might sidestep the controversy with the Bush administration's help. If President Bush issues pre-emptive pardons to prevent prosecutions, the Obama administration should form a bipartisan panel, similar to the Sept. 11 commission, to oversee an inquiry, he said. Once pardoned, officials implicated in the controversy would be required to discuss details of the policies because they'd be unable to assert their Fifth Amendment right to avoid self-incrimination.

The best person to lead such a commission? Levinson thinks it's John McCain, who condemned the interrogation techniques when he was running against Obama.

"There would be widespread support if the Obama administration did reach out to someone like McCain," Levinson said. "More people would regard it as not so much of a Democratic vendetta but as a necessary cleansing of an episode in recent American history that has had phenomenal costs to us around the world."

Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California, a senior member of the Senate Judiciary and Intelligence committees, predicted that Obama would move to close Guantanamo relatively quickly. She'll reintroduce legislation to do so early next year.

"The handwriting is on the wall," Feinstein said. "It's just a matter of time."

Although Guantanamo isn't expected to be as thorny as the issues of interrogation techniques, detention without charges and eavesdropping, it may take longer to close than Obama wants because of the question of what to do with high-value terrorists. The Obama administration could end up moving them to prisons scattered across the United States as it sorts out who should remain jailed and where others should be sent.

The Bush Justice Department chose to fight the court-ordered releases of many of the detainees, even those whom the military had cleared. Obama's attorney general is likely to soften that stance and begin releasing them with court oversight, or perhaps order new legal reviews of all detainees.

Three dozen district-court and 15 appellate court vacancies await. Appellate court decisions set precedents for multiple states. Whoever fills the vacant seat on the San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, for instance, will shape the law covering nine Western states.

For this reason, appellate court vacancies can become battlegrounds. On the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals, which spans five states, including the Carolinas, a vacancy lingers after eight years.

Considerable speculation in the legal community has centered on potential female appointees to the Supreme Court, where Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg is the only woman. One potential candidate is Judge Sonia Sotomayor, the first Hispanic woman to serve on the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals. Another is Harvard Law School's Dean Elena Kagan, who like Obama was on the University of Chicago Law School faculty.

Noncourt appointments, too, can shape the law in important ways.

Whomever Obama appoints as attorney general and in other top positions in the Justice Department could move in new directions on hot-button issues such as gun control and immigration. And after pledging to tackle the financial crisis and concerns about global warming, Obama might dedicate more resources to prosecuting white-collar and environmental crimes.

Paul Charlton, one of the nine U.S. attorneys whom the Bush administration ousted, predicted that an Obama administration would take a different approach to the death penalty. Charlton clashed with Bush appointees who pushed prosecutors to seek the death penalty in a wide array of cases, including drug trafficking. "I expect there will be a more judicious use of the death penalty," he said.

However, Bush administration critics who hope an Obama White House will be the antidote to what they see as excessive executive power may be disappointed.

Gene Healy, a Cato Institute vice president and the author of the book "The Cult of the Presidency: America's Dangerous Devotion to Executive Power," said expanding presidential power was a bipartisan reflex.

"People tend to think more positively about having robust executive authority when they're the ones who are actually wielding the authority," he said.

Obama, however, is unlikely to be aggressive as Bush. "He'll probably seek congressional approval, and that may be more effective at growing executive power than the unilateral, go-it-alone approach," Healy said.

© 2008 McClatchy Newspapers


 
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