Russ McBee

Random thoughts, files, and photos
Welcome to Russ McBee Sign in | Join | Help
in Search

Browse by Tags

All Tags » politics » civil rights   (RSS)
Showing page 1 of 2 (15 total posts)
  • Diebold admits to dropping votes

    Diebold (now called ''Premier,'' since their previous name has become radioactive) has admitted that their electronic voting machines contain a critical flaw which can drop votes: A voting system used in 34 states contains a critical programming error that can cause votes to be dropped while being electronically transferred from memory cards to ...
    Posted to Russ McBee (Weblog) by RussMcBee on August 21, 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
  • 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 distraction du jour: Obama's comments on alienation

    Barack Obama said this yesterday: ''In a lot of these communities in big industrial states like Ohio and Pennsylvania, people have been beaten down so long. ... The jobs have been gone now for 25 years, and nothing's replaced them. And they fell through the Clinton administration and the Bush administration, and each successive administration ...
    Posted to Russ McBee (Weblog) by RussMcBee on April 12, 2008
  • Some clarity on GOP scare tactics

    Senators Jay Rockefeller and Patrick Leahy and Congressmen Silvestre Reyes and John Conyers have an op-ed piece in tomorrow's Christian Science Monitor that calls out the White House on its fear-mongering tactics regarding warrantless surveillance: Our country did not ''go dark'' on Feb. 16 when the Protect America Act (PAA) expired. ...
    Posted to Russ McBee (Weblog) by RussMcBee on February 26, 2008
  • McCain's hypocrisy on torture

    On the subject of waterboarding, here's John McCain, who was tortured by the North Vietnamese, last October: Waterboarding is a form of torture no matter how it is done and should be a prohibited among U.S. military interrogation practices, Republican presidential candidate John McCain said today, taking issue with GOP rival Rudy Giuliani’s ...
    Posted to Russ McBee (Weblog) by RussMcBee on February 13, 2008
  • The continuing crisis

    Today's updates on the continuing decline: The six Guantanamo detainees who are slated to be tried by the Bush administration's kangaroo courts are now facing the death penalty; if that's their sentence, they'll be executed at Guantanamo. The charges, the torture-derived evidence, the trials, the rules of procedure, the judge, the jury, the ...
    Posted to Russ McBee (Weblog) by RussMcBee on February 12, 2008
  • Some thoughts on Edwards

    After John Edwards's strong second-place finish in last night's Iowa caucus, he had this to say: [C]orporate greed has got a stranglehold on America. And unless and until we have a president in the proud tradition of Teddy Roosevelt, Franklin Roosevelt, Harry Truman, who has a little backbone, who has some strength, who has some fight, who's ...
    Posted to Russ McBee (Weblog) by RussMcBee on January 4, 2008
  • Mukasey defends Bush's lawlessness

    Michael Mukasey proved on Thursday that he is unfit to serve as Attorney General of the United States: President Bush's choice for attorney general, Michael B. Mukasey, embraced some of the administration's most controversial legal positions yesterday, suggesting that Bush could ignore surveillance statutes in wartime and avoiding a declaration ...
    Posted to Russ McBee (Weblog) by RussMcBee on October 18, 2007
  • First anniversary of a dark stain

    One year ago today, President Bush signed into law the Military Commissions Act of 2006. This malignant, perfidious law gives the president the authority to suspend habeas corpus for anyone he chooses. It also sanctifies the admissibility of evidence obtained through torture. For a full year now, our country has been deprived of one of its most ...
    Posted to Russ McBee (Weblog) by RussMcBee on October 17, 2007
1 2 Next >
Powered by Community Server (Personal Edition), by Telligent Systems