Russ McBee

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Showing page 1 of 8 (72 total posts)
  • A new Church Committee?

    Salon has obtained a confidential memo written for certain members of Congress that outlines a proposal for an inquiry modeled on the Church Committee; this modern version of Church would focus on the malfeasance of the Bush administration, and it hints at Constitutional and legal violations which go far beyond those already documented: The ...
    Posted to Russ McBee (Weblog) by RussMcBee on July 23, 2008
  • Taking the FISA fight to the next level

    I've often thought that President Bush probably read ''The Trial'' and ''1984'' at some point and mistook them for how-to manuals. Today's signing of the FISA bill tends to support that theory. On the heels of yesterday's capitulation by the Senate on telecom immunity and warrantless spying, President Bush wasted no time in signing this abrogation ...
    Posted to Russ McBee (Weblog) by RussMcBee on July 10, 2008
  • A silver lining?

    The Senate predictably caved today and passed the FISA reform bill, which included immunity for the telecommunications companies that had conspired with intelligence agencies to spy on Americans without warrant. Bruce Afran, an attorney representing plaintiffs suing the telecom companies over their collaboration, described today's vote as ...
    Posted to Russ McBee (Weblog) by RussMcBee on July 9, 2008
  • Feingold speaks on the FISA travesty

    In this interview with Amy Goodman, Senator Russ Feingold (D-WI) promises to filibuster the horrid FISA amnesty bill when it reaches the Senate. First, he outlines the most potent objections to the bill: Sen. Russ Feingold: Well, this is a great blow to the rights of the American people. And much of the publicity has been about a very ...
    Posted to Russ McBee (Weblog) by RussMcBee on June 24, 2008
  • AP follows RIAA and MPAA into the gutter

    Last week, the Associated Press sent seven DMCA take-down notices to the Drudge Retort (a liberal counterpoint to that other Drudge) based solely on the fact that they had posted short excerpts of AP wire stories. After some pretty significant blowback (and a boycott of their content), the AP decided it might not be in their best interests to ...
    Posted to Russ McBee (Weblog) by RussMcBee on June 16, 2008
  • Chalk one up for the Constitution

    This morning, the US Supreme Court handed down its decision in Boumediene v. Bush, holding that Guantanamo detainees have the right to challenge their detention in US civilian courts. As SCOTUSblog said: The Court, dividing 5-4, ruled that Congress had not validly taken away habeas rights. If Congress wishes to suspend habeas, it must do so ...
    Posted to Russ McBee (Weblog) by RussMcBee on June 12, 2008
  • Why a McCain vote is a bad idea, reason #3,744

    As if we needed another reason why McCain would be a horrid president: If elected president, Senator John McCain would reserve the right to run his own warrantless wiretapping program against Americans, based on the theory that the president's wartime powers trump federal criminal statutes and court oversight, according to a statement released ...
    Posted to Russ McBee (Weblog) by RussMcBee on June 4, 2008
  • Marsha Blackburn and other wingnuts sign off on theocracy

    Thirty-one members of the US House of Representatives seem to think the establishment of an American theocracy is a more urgent matter than any of the economic, military, or environmental problems we face. Those 31, including Tennessee's own resident wingnut Marsha Blackburn, have co-sponsored HR 598; the bill's stated purpose is: Supporting ...
    Posted to Russ McBee (Weblog) by RussMcBee on May 21, 2008
  • The kangaroo courts begin to collapse

    The sham ''trials'' of detainees at Guantanamo have always been legally and Constitutionally invalid, but they were continuing anyway. Now, the process of these show trials has met some blowback from within the Pentagon (in contrast to civilian trials, all of the defense attorneys, prosecutors, and judges in these cases are uniformed officers in ...
    Posted to Russ McBee (Weblog) by RussMcBee on May 13, 2008
  • Another Yoo torture memo

    In August 2002, John Yoo wrote an infamous memo on behalf of the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel which attempted to justify the use of torture by the CIA. The memo has since been released (PDF here), widely circulated, and then disavowed by the Bush White House. Another memo accompanied that one which remains secret to this day; this ...
    Posted to Russ McBee (Weblog) by RussMcBee on May 8, 2008
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