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Mass Murderers Brazenly Hold Conference, Discuss Tools of Trade Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=11177"><span class="small">David Swanson, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Saturday, 07 June 2014 15:06

Swanson writes: "Have we at long last no sense of decency? War has taken 200 million lives in the past 100 years, costs the world $2 trillion a year and the United States half of that."

David Swanson is an author, activist, journalist and radio host. (photo: War Is A Crime.org)
David Swanson is an author, activist, journalist and radio host. (photo: War Is A Crime.org)


Mass Murderers Brazenly Hold Conference, Discuss Tools of Trade

By David Swanson, Reader Supported News

07 June 13

A unique conference is planned in Charlottesville, Va., featuring the latest technologies for the practice of large-scale killing.

he Daily Progress tells us that, "to allow participants to speak more freely about potentially sensitive topics, the conference is closed to the media and open only to registered participants."

Well I should think so! Registered participants? How does one get registered for such a thing?

"From a local perspective, this industry is really growing in Charlottesville," says one expert, speaking with great objectivity, as if this growth were a matter of complete moral indifference.

Exactly how many people will be there?

"About 225 people are expected to attend the inaugural event, which is attracting government, business and academic leaders, said conference chairwoman and organizer Joan Bienvenue, who is also the director of the UVa Applied Research Institute."

Wait, what? The University of Virginia has an "applied research institute" for applying research to the practice of mass murder?

Is there no shame left in any institution?

"Sen. Timothy M. Kaine and Rep. Randy Forbes, R-4th, are also scheduled to give key speeches at the conference."

I guess that answers my question.

And where exactly will this blood-soaked confab take place?

"Located in Albemarle County, Rivanna Station is a sub-installation of the Army's Fort Belvoir. The local base employs mostly civilians and houses operations of the National Ground Intelligence Center, Defense Intelligence Agency and National Geospatial Intelligence Agency."

The National Ground Intelligence Center, previously downtown in what became the SNL Financial building, is now north of Charlottesville, and the University of Virginia has built a "research park" next door, where this conference will be held. The NGIC famously played an utterly shameless role in marketing the war on Iraq that took at least half a million lives and destroyed that nation.

When the experts at the Department of Energy refused to say that aluminum tubes in Iraq were for nuclear facilities, because they knew they could not possibly be and were almost certainly for rockets, and when the State Department's people also refused to reach the "correct" conclusion, a couple of guys at the NGIC were happy to oblige. Their names were George Norris and Robert Campus, and they received "performance awards" (cash) for the service.

Then Secretary of State Colin Powell used Norris' and Campus' claims in his U.N. speech despite the warning of his own staff that they weren't true. NGIC also hired a company called MZM to assist with war lies for a good chunk of change. MZM then gave a well-paid job to NGIC's deputy director Bill Rich Jr, and for good measure Bill Rich III too.

MZM was far and away the top "contributor" to former Congressman Virgil Goode's campaigns, and he got them a big contract in Martinsville before they went down in the Duke Cunningham scandal. Rich then picked up a job with a company called Sparta, which, like MZM, was conveniently located in the UVA Research Park.

Local want ads in Charlottesville offer jobs "researching biological and chemical weapons" at Battelle Memorial Institute (located in the UVA Research Park). As you may know, researching such weapons is rarely if ever done without producing or at least possessing them. Other jobs are available producing all kinds of weaponry for all kinds of governments at Northrop Grumman. Then there's Teksystems, Pragmatics, Wiser, and many others with fat Pentagon contracts.

From 2000 to 2010, 161 military contractors in Charlottesville pulled in $919,914,918 through 2,737 contracts from the federal government. Over $8 million of that went to Mr. Jefferson's university, and three-quarters of that to the Darden Business School.

And the trend is ever upward. The 161 contractors are found in various industries other than higher education, including nautical system and instrument manufacturing; blind and shade manufacturing; printed circuit assembly; real estate appraisers; engineering services; recreational sports centers; research and development in biotechnology; new car dealers; internet publishing; petroleum merchant wholesalers; and a 2006 contract with Pig Daddy's BBQ.

Have we at long last no sense of decency? War has taken 200 million lives in the past 100 years, costs the world $2 trillion a year and the United States half of that. It is the top destroyer of our natural environment and undergirds all the removal of our civil liberties and the creation of mass surveillance. Military spending produces fewer jobs that other government spending or even tax cuts. Numerous top officials say it produces more enemies than it kills.

And who does it kill? Over 90% are civilians of all ages. Over 90% are on one side of conflicts between wealthy and poor countries. These one-sided slaughters leave behind devastated nations: Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya.

A poll of 65 nations found the U.S. is most widely viewed as the greatest threat to peace. For 3% of what the United States spends on a program of killing that endangers us, impoverishes us, and erodes our way of life, starvation could be eliminated worldwide. It wouldn't take much to become the most beloved nation rather than the most feared.

And wouldn't it be nice to live in a society where our top public program didn't have to be kept hush-hush to protect "sensitive topics"?

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Tea Party Dead-Enders Print
Saturday, 07 June 2014 15:01

Egan writes: "The Tea Party is five years old this election season, which means it's done teething and spitting up on itself, but still prone to temper tantrums, irrational outbursts and threats to take its toys and storm off if it doesn't get its way."

Christine 'I'm not a witch' O'Donnell. (photo: Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP)
Christine 'I'm not a witch' O'Donnell. (photo: Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP)


Tea Party Dead-Enders

By Timothy Egan, The New York Times

07 June 14

 

he Tea Party is five years old this election season, which means it’s done teething and spitting up on itself, but still prone to temper tantrums, irrational outbursts and threats to take its toys and storm off if it doesn’t get its way.

As a movement, it is down to a couple of former talk-radio hosts running for office in two states of the old Confederacy, Texas and Mississippi. And in the latter, the Senate candidate, Chris McDaniel, has given a keynote to a group that considers Abraham Lincoln a war criminal. It’s not hard to make the case that the Tea Party has been distilled down to it logical essence.

“They don’t want to go to the moon,” said the comedian Bill Maher. “They want to howl at it.” Still, the Tea Party has also been around long enough to have a record, of sorts. Let’s look at the legacy:

READ MORE

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Saturday, 07 June 2014 13:05

Carpenter writes: "Last week, the attorney Jon Eisenberg was trying to get in touch with a client of his - a Syrian named Jihad Ahmed Mujstafa Diyab, who has been detained at Guantanamo Bay for nearly twelve years without trial. Twice a day for months, medical staff and guards have dragged Diyab from his cell, strapped him in a chair, and forced a tube down his throat, ostensibly to ensure that he doesn't die during a prolonged hunger strike."

Guantánamo. (photo: Brennan Linsley/AP)
Guantánamo. (photo: Brennan Linsley/AP)


Bowe Bergdahl and the Real Guantánamo Detainee Scandal

By Zoë Carpenter, The Nation

07 June 14

 

ast week, the attorney Jon Eisenberg was trying to get in touch with a client of his—a Syrian named Jihad Ahmed Mujstafa Diyab, who has been detained at Guantánamo Bay for nearly twelve years without trial. Twice a day for months, medical staff and guards have dragged Diyab from his cell, strapped him in a chair, and forced a tube down his throat, ostensibly to ensure that he doesn’t die during a prolonged hunger strike.

Eisenberg had trouble reaching Diyab. All telephone communication between detainees and their lawyers had been shut down, Eisenberg says—presumably because President Obama was in the midst of delicate and secret negotiations with the Taliban over exchanging five other men held at Guantánamo for an American prisoner of war named Bowe Bergdahl. (A spokesperson for Joint Task Force Guantanamo said he could not confirm or deny Eisenberg’s account.)

The five Guantánamo detainees, reportedly Taliban officials, have now been escorted to Qatar, where they will be able to walk freely on the streets. Left at the military prison are seventy-eight other men who have been cleared for release yet remain in interminable detention. Most, like Diyab, were cleared more than four years ago. Though Obama continues to profess his commitment to closing the prison, and though constraints placed by Congress on his ability to do so have weakened considerably, his administration has not demonstrated the resolve to transfer the remaining prisoners.

“From the administration’s perspective, I think they must have seen more urgency from Bergdahl,” said Eisenberg. “From my client’s perspective, it’s plenty urgent. He’s being tortured every day.”

Just weeks ago the president of Uruguay, Jose Mujica Cordano, offered to accept six of the cleared men as refugees. Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel said on May 28 that he would decide to reject or accept the proposal “fairly soon.” Now that Obama has shown a willingness to push legal boundaries in order to move detainees whose designation as a threat seems at least plausible, the circumstance of men like Diyab, who the government never intends to charge with a crime, is even more indefensible.

“What’s changed is that the president has finally taken the initiative,” said Wells Dixon, a senior attorney at the Center for Constitutional Rights, which represents eight Guantánamo detainees. “What we’re hoping is that he will continue to take bold steps to transfer the remaining men, who are not nearly as complicated or as controversial.”

The administration’s legal authority to move the men who’ve been cleared for release is much clearer than it appears in the Bergdahl swap. According to the National Defense Authorization Act passed last year, the secretary of defense needs only to notify Congress of any prisoner transfers thirty days beforehand.

The most significant complication is “the Yemen problem.” Yemenis make of the bulk of the men who’ve been cleared for release, but none has been repatriated since 2009. Obama announced more than a year ago that he would lift a ban on repatriating Guantánamo’s Yemeni prisoners, a moratorium he himself imposed after a man who’d allegedly trained with an Al Qaeda affiliate in Yemen tried blow up an airplane bound for Detroit using bomb hidden in his underwear. US and Yemeni officials have discussed a plan to move prisoners to a yet-to-be-built detention center outside the capital Sana’a, but the proposal faces funding issues, and there are outstanding questions about whether it would function as a rehabilitation center or merely another prison.

“That is the biggest barrier, figuring out where to send the Yemenis,” said Andrea Prasow, who works on detainee issues for Human Rights Watch. From her perspective, concerns about safety don’t justify indefinite detention. “There’s a possibility that anyone on the streets in Yemen—or anywhere—can pose a risk to us, but we don’t lock those people up,” she said. “There’s only one way to close Guantánamo, and that’s by sending people home.”

Prasow is hopeful that the Bergdahl deal “signifies a sea change” in the president’s willingness to act swiftly to relocate the remaining Guantánamo detainees. “There’s all this political backlash, but the administration is going to weather it. Meanwhile there’s tremendous backlash around the world about the fact that Guantánamo is still open.”

Eisenberg, who represents three other prisoners along with Diyab, is less optimistic. “You would think that [transferring the cleared detainees] would be the easier decision for Hagel to make,” he said. “There are different pressures brought to bear in the Bergdahl case.”

Ultimately, the Bergdahl case illustrates that the greatest barriers to closing Guantánamo are political, not legal or logistical, and that they remain in place only so long as the president allows. Republicans who would like to keep Guantánamo open will no doubt channel the right-wing outrage over the release of the five Taliban prisoners to their own ends. But their bluster has no bearing on the president’s authority to send home men whose freedom is both recommended by US officials, and long overdue. There’s simply no way to close Guantánamo without doing so.

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FOCUS | And So the Sale of Our Democracy Rolls On Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=11104"><span class="small">Charles Pierce, Esquire</span></a>   
Saturday, 07 June 2014 11:33

Pierce writes: "Lost in all the noise ... of the coverage of the Bowe Bergdahl story this week was the fact that the Senate began the long and laborious and ... utterly futile work of crafting a constitutional amendment to try and repair the damage done to democracy by the efforts of the current Supreme Court."

(photo illustration: DonkeyHotey/Flickr)
(photo illustration: DonkeyHotey/Flickr)


And So the Sale of Our Democracy Rolls On

By Charles Pierce, Esquire

07 June 14

 

ost in all the noise -- and all the towering bad taste -- of the coverage of the Bowe Bergdahl story this week was the fact that the Senate began the long and laborious and (I suspect) utterly futile work of crafting a constitutional amendment to try and repair the damage done to democracy by the efforts of the current Supreme Court, in its Citizens United and McCutcheon rulings, to legalize influence peddling and to privatize general political corruption. Senator Tom Udall of New Mexico -- whose uncle I strove mightily to put in the White House almost 40 years ago -- brought a proposed constitutional amendment before the Senate Judiciary Committee that would reverse those decisions, and try to stem the flood of corporate and private -- and largely unaccountable -- money that promises to swell even further over the next several election cycles. As Amy Howe of ScotusBlog reported:

Senator Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) opened the hearing by describing the goal of the proposed amendment: "to repair the damage done by a series of flawed Supreme Court decisions that overturned longstanding precedent and eviscerated campaign finance laws." Leahy emphasized recent rulings in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, holding that the government may not prohibit corporations or unions from spending money to support or denounce individual candidates in elections, and McCutcheon v. Federal Election Commission, striking down aggregate limits on campaign contributions. In his view, the Court has "opened the floodgates to billionaires who are pouring vast amounts of unfettered and undisclosed dollars into political campaigns across the country." Leahy emphasized that he had "long been wary of attempts to change the Constitution because I have seen" such proposals "used, like bumper stickers, merely to score political points." But in his view, an amendment is necessary here because the Court's decisions in Citizens United and McCutcheon were "based . . . on a flawed interpretation of the First Amendment."

Howe states quite correctly that this proposal does not stand a snowball's chance of ever becoming an actual constitutional amendment, but Udall's effort at least clarified the positions of both sides.

Leahy was followed by Senator Charles Grassley (R-Iowa), the Committee's ranking Republican member. Leahy had previewed some of the key themes that other supporters of the amendment would echo in the hearing, and Grassley did the same for Republicans. He contended that, "today, freedom of speech is threatened as it has not been in many decades," and he observed that the proposed amendment would be the very first amendment in history to the Bill of Rights. Grassley warned of the amendment's potentially broad sweep, cautioning that it could, for example, allow Congress to eliminate campaign contributions altogether. "It's outrageous," he concluded, "to say that limiting speech is necessary for democracy."

(I would also argue to Senator Grassley that the Reconstruction amendments certainly were "amendments" to the Bill of Rights in that they ordered to states to abide by the original provisions of the Bill of Rights.)

And that is where the Supreme Court has left us. A debate over the preposterous notion that money is speech, and that more money means more speech, and this in a world in which the same court found reason to gut the Voting Rights Act so that it would be hobbled in the new era of big-money campaigning that the Court inaugurated in its other two decisions. The real joker in the deck is that the decisions -- and Citizens United, in particular -- are written so tightly that any legislative action to reverse them short of a constitutional amendment likely will fail. (And forget about state action. A century-old Montana law banning corporate contributions to political campaign was overturned by this same Supreme Court, which used Citizens United as a precedent for doing so.) However, this isn't the first time that Congress, and citizens, have attempted to propose a constitutional amendment to deal with the consequences of a Supreme Court decision in the field of campaign finance.

As Richard Bernstein recounts in Amending America, his study of the amendment process throughout American political history, in 1980, a group of Washington wise men put together something called the Committee On The Constitutional System, which proposed to update the work of the Founders and to "...identify the outmoded features"of the Constitution "separating them from the good and durable parts of the system." The CCS proposed a series of new amendments, including one that, as Bernstein puts it, would "amend the First Amendment to provide Congress authority to set campaign spending limits (overturning the Supreme Court's 1976 decision in Buckley v. Valeo). Granted, the CCS largely was nothing more than a high-class thought experiment, but its proposed campaign-finance amendment tracks Udall's proposed amendment almost exactly and, like Udall's, it addresses a Supreme Court decision that guaranteed more money sluicing through the system.

The Valeo decision, of course, was the first crack in the dam. In 1971, Congress passed the Federal Elections Campaign Act, which it then amended three years later in the aftermath of the Watergate scandal, which had been financed by a slush fund of unaccountable campaign money. The law limited contributions by individuals and groups, and candidates themselves, as well as providing for a system to inaugurate the public financing of campaigns. It was challenged by a number of people, including then-Senator James Buckley of New York and former senator Eugene McCarthy. In an unsigned per curiam decision, the Supreme Court struck down provisions of the law in a muddled decision in which five Justices, including Chief Justice Warren Burger, dissented in part from the majority's opinion, but most of the dissents argued that the Court did not go far enough in respecting the role of campaign contributions as political speech. (This was the bug in the ear of Burger, who wrote that "contributions and expenditures are two sides of the same First Amendment coin.") The taproot of our present Citizens United-McCutcheon system can be traced back to Burger and his First Amendment coin. Reading the decision, philosopher John Rawls was particularly prescient. Rawls argued that the decision "runs the risk of endorsing the view that fair representation is representation according to the amount of influence effectively exerted."

So the current Court has struck down decades of precedent in the field of campaign finance, and it also has arranged things that the only real remedy is one that is impossible to achieve. The consequences of 40 years of trying to clean up the rot with which big money infects the structure of democracy has been a series of legal decisions that sanctified the rot with the most profound blessing the Constitution can provide. The consequences of those decisions have been entirely foreseeable. If Udall's Sisyphean effort does nothing more than draw all our attention to those simple facts, it will be quite worth the trouble.

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How the National Security State Kills a Free Society Print
Saturday, 07 June 2014 09:33

Snowden writes: "Technology has been a liberating force in our lives. It allows us to create and share the experiences that make us human, effortlessly. But in secret, our very own government - one bound by the Constitution and its Bill of Rights - has reverse-engineered something beautiful into a tool of mass surveillance and oppression."

Portrait detail of Edward Snowden. (photo: Robert Shetterly/americanswhotellthetruth.org)
Portrait detail of Edward Snowden. (photo: Robert Shetterly/americanswhotellthetruth.org)


How the National Security State Kills a Free Society

By Edward Snowden, American Civil Liberties Union

07 June 14

 

Below is an email ACLU supporters received from Edward Snowden Thursday, one year to the day since The Guardian broke the first in a series of revelations exposing the breathtaking scope of U.S. government surveillance. Click here for a new video documenting the incredible events of the last year, along with a timeline and the ACLU’s guide to privacy reform.

t's been one year.

Technology has been a liberating force in our lives. It allows us to create and share the experiences that make us human, effortlessly. But in secret, our very own government -- one bound by the Constitution and its Bill of Rights -- has reverse-engineered something beautiful into a tool of mass surveillance and oppression. The government right now can easily monitor whom you call, whom you associate with, what you read, what you buy, and where you go online and offline, and they do it to all of us, all the time.

Today, our most intimate private records are being indiscriminately seized in secret, without regard for whether we are actually suspected of wrongdoing. When these capabilities fall into the wrong hands, they can destroy the very freedoms that technology should be nurturing, not extinguishing. Surveillance, without regard to the rule of law or our basic human dignity, creates societies that fear free expression and dissent, the very values that make America strong.

In the long, dark shadow cast by the security state, a free society cannot thrive.

That's why one year ago I brought evidence of these irresponsible activities to the public -- to spark the very discussion the U.S. government didn't want the American people to have. With every revelation, more and more light coursed through a National Security Agency that had grown too comfortable operating in the dark and without public consent. Soon incredible things began occurring that would have been unimaginable years ago. A federal judge in open court called an NSA mass surveillance program likely unconstitutional and "almost Orwellian." Congress and President Obama have called for an end to the dragnet collection of the intimate details of our lives. Today legislation to begin rolling back the surveillance state is moving in Congress after more than a decade of impasse.

I am humbled by our collective successes so far. When the Guardian and The Washington Post began reporting on the NSA's project to make privacy a thing of the past, I worried the risks I took to get the public the information it deserved would be met with collective indifference.

One year later, I realize that my fears were unwarranted.

Americans, like you, still believe the Constitution is the highest law of the land, which cannot be violated in secret in the name of a false security. Some say I'm a man without a country, but that's not true. America has always been an ideal, and though I'm far away, I've never felt as connected to it as I do now, watching the necessary debate unfold as I hoped it would. America, after all, is always at our fingertips; that is the power of the Internet.

But now it's time to keep the momentum for serious reform going so the conversation does not die prematurely.

Only then will we get the legislative reform that truly reins in the NSA and puts the government back in its constitutional place. Only then will we get the secure technologies we need to communicate without fear that silently in the background, our very own government is collecting, collating, and crunching the data that allows unelected bureaucrats to intrude into our most private spaces, analyzing our hopes and fears. Until then, every American who jealously guards their rights must do their best to engage in digital self-defense and proactively protect their electronic devices and communications. Every step we can take to secure ourselves from a government that no longer respects our privacy is a patriotic act.

We've come a long way, but there's more to be done.

-- Edward J. Snowden, American

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