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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. ...
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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 ...
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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 ...
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This should come as absolutely no surprise to anyone:
Former members and staffers of the 9/11 Commission have concluded that the CIA withheld videotapes of harsh interrogation sessions even after specific and ''very detailed'' requests about the two prisoners whose tapes were later destroyed, according to a review of classified material by the ...
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This article provides an in-depth survey of the current state of international arms trading. A couple of choice quotes:
Vast government subsidies are sought after in the pursuit of arms trading.
US and European corporations receive enormous tax breaks and even lend money to other countries to purchase weapons from them. Therefore tax payers ...
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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 ...
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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 ...
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