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Stand Up and Fight, Mr. President! Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=27212"><span class="small">Patrick L. Smith, Salon</span></a>   
Monday, 30 September 2013 08:21

Smith writes: "We need context fully to grasp this week at the U.N. It has to do with history, and it is always hard to see history when you are living it."

Barack Obama addresses the 68th United Nations General Assembly in New York. (photo: Pool/Reuters)
Barack Obama addresses the 68th United Nations General Assembly in New York. (photo: Pool/Reuters)


Stand Up and Fight, Mr. President!

By Patrick L. Smith, Salon

30 September 13

 

The moment requires courage, conviction -- and presidential leadership. How will President Obama respond?

emarkable doings at the U.N. this week. Remember these days. They are going to change the way we understand the dynamic in the Middle East - what is possible and what not.

General Assemblies ordinarily do no more than clog traffic on Manhattan's East Side and fill tables at pricey French restos. This one, No. 68, is turning out differently. Something is happening at this session, which runs into next week - something small now but destined to grow large, in my view.

But we have to start with what did not happen.

Everyone was aflutter before the GA opened, given that President Obama would be milling around the same diplomatic lounges as Iran's new reformist president, Hassan Rouhani. They were going to address the same heads of state, taking up the same topic: Can Washington and Tehran get beyond three and a half decades of enmity and advance toward a cooperative relationship? People fixated on the thought of a handshake. Nixon and Mao. Kissinger and Lę Ð?c Th?. Begin and Arafat. Obama and Rouhani.

There was no handshake. Muted groans all around.

It matters not. The only interesting thing about the missing handshake was how Washington played it. Obama was ready; the ayatollah was just not up to it: This was the drift, faithfully conveyed by our media, which went, profoundly, from a fixation on the handshake to a fixation on the no-handshake. It is nonsense. Rouhani has his adversaries at home, plainly. But the man is out there in the political pit taking on the beast, and this is just as plain. Obama is the one tiptoeing past the political risk - less courageously, you have to say.

Obama's courage, indeed, will be much at issue in coming weeks. He took the wise choice at the General Assembly - he opened the door to Rouhani's invitation to negotiate past differences on Iran's nuclear program, Syria, Israel and much else. Is he committed to it? Does he share the vision Rouhani articulates as to all that can come - all over the Middle East - from a renovated relationship?

It is hard to say, and one worries. Obama will require more guts than now seems evident if he is going to get this done. And his opener at the U.N. was less than promising. "The roadblocks may prove to be too great," he said in reply to Rouhani's demarche, "but I firmly believe the diplomatic path must be tested." It is not much by way of compelling beliefs, fair to say. (Memo to speechwriters: It is upside down, reeking of diffidence. Do it this way next time: "Let us mount the diplomatic path and tamp it firm by treading it. Let us push aside what roadblocks may lie ahead.")

The GA is not over yet, and the best may be yet to come. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu stayed home this week, snubbing (rudely, as he does things) the Obama and Rouhani speeches (and instructing the Israeli delegation in New York to avoid Rouhani's). He is due to address the assembly next Tuesday, having just journeyed to Washington for a face-to-face in the Oval Office. These are the next big moments. They will test Obama's commitment and, let's say, chutzpah. They will afford a glimpse as to how - with wisdom or violence - the Middle East can advance beyond its incessant state of crisis. It does not get much bigger.

This brings us to the significance of GA No. 68. The equation laid bare in New York this week is this: Washington needs to reimagine its policies in the Middle East, Iran being a self-evident example. This will require an adjustment in U.S. policy toward Israel. This is the core reality. The question is whether leadership finds this adjustment politically and diplomatically possible. If it does, Washington can respond at last to an awakening Middle East. If it does not, relations with Israel will set the limits of America's capacity to recast its ties in a region demanding it do so.

This is what Rouhani carried to New York in his suitcase. Stripping this choice to its pith is the task he came to accomplish. It is why Netanyahu refuses to listen to him. It is what causes those simpering sounds emitting from the White House. The past (known) is often preferred to the future (unknown). Enemies proposing friendship can be more frightening than enemies. These are Rouhani's challenges - I suspect, just as he intended them.

These days are so filled with event on the foreign relations side that we have a brief time to consider preference and probability, one next to the other.

You are reading a columnist with a vigorous preference for a new path forward in the Middle East. Three reasons:

• We and the Middle East need it. Americans love their technological innovations, but iGadgets are not true innovations - changes in the way we think and do things and understand others. We do not get much innovation done on the foreign relations side, for instance. This would be authentic innovation, but there is little to none so far as I can make out. Look at Egypt. We had a duly elected government and could manage nothing more than a reversion to support for military cruelty. Even Obama, at the U.N., acknowledged "the hostility that our engagement in the region has engendered throughout the Muslim world." All you have to do is think of why this hostility arises. It is not a given. We earned it and can earn our way out of it.

• Iran is a splendid potential friend. "All that's gold doesn't shine," as the old Dylan lyric goes. It is an emerging regional power, regardless of whether we or the Israelis or the Iranians themselves want this to be so. Its influence will be inevitable in coming years. There are diverse tendencies within Iran, rather as there are everywhere, not least in the U.S., and Rouhani's leap to the U.N. podium tells us the constructive, engaging tendency is on the ascendant now. To connect with it, all we have to do is drop our suspicion of all "difference," in that the project cannot be to make Iranians be as we are. That is a loser. "The paradox of Iran is that it just might be the most pro-American - or, perhaps, least anti-American - populace in the Muslim world." That is Karim Sadjadpour, an analyst in Tehran for the International Crisis Group, speaking in 2005. Anyone who knows Iran and its people knows this remains true times two. We have wasted an asset for a long time.

• Washington must recognize that the relationship with Israel is badly misshapen - damaging to the U.S., to Israel itself, and to the Arab world (and to the Iranians, obviously). The fact that writing the above sentence is a source of anxiety for an American columnist is a symptom of the problem. Honest Israelis know well the lock they have on American politics, our most powerful media, and the process wherein policy and conscience mix. Remaining quiet on this point is a failing option. A good reading of history will tell you that the Holocaust was made an industry in the U.S. after the 1967 war, when the Israeli war machine first proved itself and memory was leveraged into "strategy." This good reading can be found in a book just named: "The Holocaust Industry: Reflections on the Exploitation of Jewish Suffering," by Norman G. Finkelstein. The point is credibly made - and by a Jew, which has spared the book big problems. Normalizing ties with Israel - it is just the word - will open the U.S. to new thinking in the Middle East and do Israel much good, providing the Israeli leadership has a fraction of the courage and humanity so many individual Jews have so famously displayed.

I will revel in my preferences while I can entertain them, because the probability is disappointment. Just two reasons this time:

• Obama appears not to register the magnitude of his moment. And without the vision, he will not have the fight. In my expectation, he will go down like a stick of butter when faced with lobby-manipulated men and women on Capitol Hill and Netanyahu's strong-man act.

• Netanyahu, then. I have rated him before in this space as the Middle East's most dangerous man, and he will now prove it once more - when, as is likely, he scuttles progress between Washington and Tehran. At the moment, Obama's timid acceptance of Iran's opening has Netanyahu on his back foot. His water-carriers in the Jerusalem think tanks deployed this week to get him across as a cautious man. But this is mere "media spin," to apply a little immanent critique to Netanyahu's irrational dismissal last week of Rouhani's efforts. Netanyahu may work some openness and reason and good will into his GA speech. But add "pseudo" to each descriptive. The Jersusalem Post warns us he plans to compare Iran to North Korea, which will be clunky beyond all belief. In the Oval Office with Obama, the Israeli leader will open up with both guns blazing, and new diplomacy is unlikely to be among the survivors. He believes in violence. There are historical reasons for this, but none stands as a justification.

We need context fully to grasp this week at the U.N. It has to do with history, and it is always hard to see history when you are living it.

The U.S. entered a passage of fundamental change in what I have called in this space "the dangerous summer," meaning these past several months. The earth's crust is shifting, figuratively. Washington will either change the cast of its foreign relations or pay the price of not doing so. Preventing change is no longer on the table.

So far, it does not look good, and there is a reason why beyond sheer inertia. The travesty in Egypt, capped with Secretary of State Kerry's defense of the army coup as "restoring democracy," was for Israel's sake. The rogue-nation plan to shell Syria, aborted at the last moment, was in large measure for Israel's sake. We now witness a third chance to decide well or badly - the biggest of the three. Flinch from the Iranian challenge, and it will be for Israel's sake - Netanyahu's Israel, anyway.

It is the likely outcome at this moment. Netanyahu will do in all prospects for progress by reasserting his collection of purposefully invasive demands on Iranian sovereignty and rights under international law.

But let us watch. Surprise an hour these days.


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The Pros and Cons of Legal Cannabis Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=7118"><span class="small">Carl Gibson, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Sunday, 29 September 2013 15:21

Gibson writes: "The entire world is watching [Washington State] and how we're handling this, how we're putting it all together."

A vendor displays products in Seattle. Washington State was one of the first to legalize recreational marijuana. (photo: Jason Redmond/Reuters)
A vendor displays products in Seattle. Washington State was one of the first to legalize recreational marijuana. (photo: Jason Redmond/Reuters)


The Pros and Cons of Legal Cannabis

By Carl Gibson, Reader Supported News

29 September 13

 

t the CPC, or Center for Palliative Care, in the Georgetown neighborhood of Seattle, a friend and I walked into Ben Reagan's office in the back of the clinic. The walls were lined with extracts, concentrates, and edibles. Rotating shelves containing tubes of different strains of cannabis were neatly labeled with the name of the strain, the price per gram, and the percentage concentrations of Sativa and Indica. My friend asked Reagan what the difference was between White Widow and Widow's Peak.

"The White Widow species produces several different kinds of plants that produce different kinds of effects," Reagan said. "Widow's Peak is usually seen as the height of potential for White Widow. What kind of effect are you looking for?"

"I want to have really great sex," said my friend, who was visiting the CPC as a carrier of a medical card that gave him permission by the state of Washington to use medical cannabis for the back pain he had contracted from his years as a firefighter. "And I don't want my partner to fall asleep."

"Then you want to blend the Harlequin and the White Widow," Reagan said. "It's kind of heady, but still a little more on the fun side than the sleepy side. The White Widow is 60% Sativa blend, making it more of a daytime thing. The Indica strain is more for joint pain and insomnia."

Washington approved the use of medical cannabis in 1998, and the CPC has been in business in Seattle for roughly four years. Just last year, voters in both Colorado and Washington State approved ballot initiatives that legalized the recreational sale of cannabis while instituting regulations similar to those governing the sale of alcohol. For example, nobody under the age of 21 can buy it, it's still illegal to consume it in public, and getting caught driving under the influence of cannabis will still result in a DUI charge. It's still not possible for anyone without a medical card to buy cannabis in Washington, but regulations are expected to go fully into effect by spring of 2014.

"As a business that's been around for a long time, Ben and I have been lucky to serve as consultants to state legislators, city officials, police departments, and district attorneys who now have to figure out how to regulate a product that can be used as medicine, fuel, polymer, plastic, and other products that are already regulated," said Jeremy Kaufman, executive director of the CPC. "The entire world is watching [Washington State] and how we're handling this, how we're putting it all together."

The CPC is still legally classified as a nonprofit medical R&D firm. Kaufman explained the concept of palliative care as the type of care you receive for various ailments and conditions, and said there hasn't been one case that's walked through his doors whom he hasn't been able to help with cannabis.

"A big part of what we do is education," Kaufman said. "We've been able to help treat cancer, chronic pain, loss of appetite, insomnia, nerve disorders, psychological disorders, and a lot of other conditions. As symbiotic, organic organisms, human beings and cannabis have a very unique relationship."

However, Kaufman still hasn't reclassified his business under the new 502 law that was passed by Washington voters last fall, because the end result would be more costly to customers. Under the new system, there would be an additional 50 to 70 percent increase in sales taxes on top of the 9.8 percent sales tax the CPC already charges. Kaufman said the additional taxes come from a 25% sales tax any time the product changes hands.

"You get taxed 25 percent when it goes from the grower to the extractor, to the processor, to the baker, to the retailer, before it even gets to the end user," Kaufman said. "The state is seeing the CPC as a model to build off of going forward, so a big part of our education is also showing that there are more efficient ways of regulating cannabis."

Under the new laws, the sale of recreational cannabis is being regulated by the same state agency that regulates the sale of liquor. But because cannabis used to be regarded as an illegal substance, there's no existing case law establishing legal precedent for how cannabis can be sold and regulated by a public entity. According to Kaufman, this means the laws literally are up to interpretation by anybody who participates in any part of the trade whenever a product changes hands, making the process a giant headache for both producers and consumers.

"At first, there was an immediate flooding of the market, and a huge free-for-all when 502 passed," Kaufman said. "People were opening all kinds of businesses, shipping in stuff from out of state, getting really cannibalistic."

Obviously, legalizing and taxing cannabis for recreational use would mean a huge increase in state tax revenues. A 2010 Cato Institute study estimated $8.7 billion in new federal and state tax revenue if cannabis were to be legalized all over the United States. Washington State's I-502 alone is projected to generate $1.9 billion in additional tax revenue in the next five years.

But at the same time, as an illegal substance becomes legal, other budgets will be cut. Because of the lack of people being arrested, jailed, and prosecuted for smoking or possessing marijuana, Washington State just passed through sweeping cuts to the departments of public safety and corrections. While there's a clear benefit in fewer lives ruined from the war on drugs, the budget cuts are nonetheless laying off people like parole officers who are monitoring murderers, rapists, and sex offenders who are out on bond.

Washington's shortcomings in the process of legalizing and taxing marijuana shouldn't discourage other states from trying, as Oregon, California, Hawaii, Alaska and Maine are likely to do soon, but should serve as an example of what went right and what can be improved the next time.



Carl Gibson, 26, is co-founder of US Uncut, a nationwide creative direct-action movement that mobilized tens of thousands of activists against corporate tax avoidance and budget cuts in the months leading up to the Occupy Wall Street movement. Carl and other US Uncut activists are featured in the documentary "We're Not Broke," which premiered at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival. He currently lives in Madison, Wisconsin. You can contact him at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it , and follow him on twitter at @uncutCG.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

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FOCUS | The GOP Is Committing Treason Print
Sunday, 29 September 2013 12:25

Galindez writes: "Here we are in 2013 and the out of touch, fanatical Tea Party wing of the Republican Party refuses to honor the results of the 2012 election."

President Obama's signature on the Affordable Care Act. (photo: unknown)
President Obama's signature on the Affordable Care Act. (photo: unknown)


The GOP Is Committing Treason

By Scott Galindez, Reader Supported News

29 September 13

 

2012 results

VOTES

% WON



Barack Obama

62,611,250

50.6%



Mitt Romney

59,134,475

47.8



Others

1,968,682

1.6


 

Results: 2008 

VOTES

% WON


Barack Obama

69,492,376

53.0%


John McCain

59,946,378

45.7


Others

1,703,390

1.3

n 2008, Barack Obama campaigned on reforming health care. He won. In 2012 he owned Obamacare and trumpeted it as his signature accomplishment. He won.

Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan, along with just about every Republican who entered the race for president in 2012, put repealing Obamacare at the center of their campaign. They fought over who would do it faster. They lost.

Here we are in 2013 and the out of touch, fanatical Tea Party wing of the Republican Party refuses to honor the results of the 2012 election. They are undemocratic radicals who would shut down the government to reverse the will of the American people.

The United States Senate, despite a grandstanding filibuster by a fanatical senator who thinks he and not John Boehner is the Speaker of the House, passed a bill that would keep the government open. Ted Cruz and his Kool-Aid drinking followers in the House were incapable of doing the responsible thing and sending the bill to President Obama. Instead they are holding our country hostage.

During a week when the presidents of Iran and Syria appeared to be rational and willing to negotiate, the Republican Party continued to be a fundamentalist, irrational regime that refuses to accept defeat.

Tea Party Republicans have a base of support that is whipped up into a frenzy and will not accept any form of surrender. They refused to accept that a black man could be elected president, and have committed themselves to making sure that President Obama is a failure, by any means necessary.

What they refuse to see is that if the president fails, we all fail. A government shut down - or worse, in default - would damage the economy at a time we can least afford it.

If the government shuts down because of attempted extortion by the GOP, the American people need to rise up and punish them in the 2014 election. They are putting politics ahead of country. It is time for the real patriots to stand up and vote out the undemocratic traitors who are committing treason in their effort to overturn the results of the last election.



Scott Galindez attended Syracuse University, where he first became politically active. The writings of El Salvador's slain archbishop Oscar Romero and the on-campus South Africa divestment movement converted him from a Reagan supporter to an activist for Peace and Justice. Over the years he has been influenced by the likes of Philip Berrigan, William Thomas, Mitch Snyder, Don White, Lisa Fithian, and Paul Wellstone. Scott met Marc Ash while organizing counterinaugural events after George W. Bush's first stolen election. Scott will be spending a year covering the presidential election from Iowa.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

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Fox News: Obama in Plot to Force Americans to Live Longer Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=9160"><span class="small">Andy Borowitz, The New Yorker</span></a>   
Sunday, 29 September 2013 08:16

Borowitz writes: "In a blockbuster documentary to be broadcast tonight, the Fox News Channel alleges that Obamacare is 'little more than a thinly veiled scheme to force Americans to live longer.'"

President Obama delivering the 2012 State of the Union. (photo: AP)
President Obama delivering the 2012 State of the Union. (photo: AP)


Fox News: Obama in Plot to Force Americans to Live Longer

By Andy Borowitz, The New Yorker

29 September 13

 

The article below is satire. Andy Borowitz is an American comedian and New York Times-bestselling author who satirizes the news for his column, "The Borowitz Report."

n a blockbuster documentary to be broadcast tonight, the Fox News Channel alleges that Obamacare is "little more than a thinly veiled scheme to force Americans to live longer."

The documentary, called "The Ugly Truth About Obamacare," claims that President Obama "is cynically using the health-care law to achieve his true objective: raising the life expectancy of Americans without their consent."

"In America, how long you live has always been your own business," says the documentary's narrator, Sean Hannity. "Under Obamacare, though, it's the government's business-a government that wants you to live as long as humanly possible."

The documentary lays out a nightmare scenario of Americans being saddled with sky-high life expectancies for years to come.

In perhaps the most chilling prediction of the documentary, Mr. Hannity warns, "If Obamacare goes into effect, Americans will be forced to live as long as people in Finland, Denmark, and other socialist countries."

Speaking with reporters today, Mr. Hannity said he hoped that the documentary would be a "wake-up call about the secret agenda behind Obamacare."

"President Obama is playing God with American lives," Mr. Hannity said. "And if he stubbornly insists on making those lives longer, that could be grounds for impeachment."


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Noam Chomsky: 'The Foundations of Liberty Are Ripped to Shreds' Print
Saturday, 28 September 2013 13:23

Excerpt: "'I think it's everything from that to surveillance systems that will be of unimaginable scale and character. And of course now data can be collected endlessly. In fact Obama supposedly has a data storage system being constructed in Utah somewhere where all kinds of data are being poured in. Who knows what?' - Noam Chomsky"

America's leading intellectual, Professor Noam Chomsky. (photo: MIT)
America's leading intellectual, Professor Noam Chomsky. (photo: MIT)


Noam Chomsky: 'The Foundations of Liberty Are Ripped to Shreds'

By Steven Garbas, Satellite

28 September 13

 

oam Chomsky is the Institute Professor and Professor Emeritus in the Department of Linguistics and Philosophy at MIT. The most cited living source in the world, his theories have been extremely influential in the fields of analytic philosophy, psychology, modern language, and computer science. He has written over 100 books examining the media, US foreign policy, social issues, Latin American and European history, and more.

We met with Professor Chomsky in Cambridge in May to discuss the development of the drone era under president Obama.

NC: Just driving in this morning I was listening to NPR news. The program opened by announcing, very excitedly, that the drone industry is exploding so fast that colleges are trying to catch up and opening new programs in the engineering schools and so on, and teaching drone technology because that's what students are dying to study because of the fantastic number of jobs going on.

And it's true. If you look at the public reports, you can imagine what the secret reports are. It's been known for a couple of years, but we learn more and more that drones, for one thing, are already being given to police departments for surveillance. And they are being designed for every possible purpose. I mean, theoretically, maybe practically, you could have a drone the size of a fly which could be buzzing around over there [points to window] listening to what we're talking about. And I'd suspect that it won't be too long before that becomes realistic.

And of course they are being used to assassinate. There's a global assassination campaign going on which is pretty interesting when you look into how it's done. I presume everyone's read the front page of the New York Times story, which is more or less a leak from the White House, because they are apparently proud of how the global assassination campaign works. Basically President Obama and his national security advisor, John Brennan, now head of the CIA, get together in the morning. And Brennan's apparently a former priest. They talk about St. Augustine and his theory of just war, and then they decide who is going to be killed today.

And the criteria are quite interesting. For example, if, say, in Yemen a group of men are spotted by a drone assembling near a truck, it's possible that they might be planning to do something that would harm us, so why don't we make sure and kill them? And there's other things like that.

And questions did come up about what happened to due process, which is supposedly the foundation of American law-it actually goes back to Magna Carta, 800 years ago-what about that? And the justice department responded. Attorney General Holder said that they are receiving due process because it's "discussed in the executive branch." King John in the 13th century, who was compelled to sign Magna Carta, would have loved that answer. But that's where we're moving. The foundations of civil law are simply being torn to shreds. This is not the only case, but it's the most striking one.

And the reactions are pretty interesting. It tells you a lot about the mentality of the country. So one column, I think it was Joe Klein, a bit of a liberal columnist for one of the journals, was asked about a case in which four little girls were killed by a drone strike. And his answer was something like, "Well, better that their little girls should be killed than ours." So in other words, maybe this stopped something that would ultimately harm us.

There is a reservation in the United Nations Charter that allows the use of force without Security Council authorization, a narrow exception in Article 51. But it specifically refers to "imminent attack" that's either underway or imminent so clearly that there is no time for reflection. It's a doctrine that goes back to Daniel Webster, the Caroline Doctrine, which specifies these conditions. That's been torn to shreds. Not just the drone attacks, but for a long time.

And so slowly the foundations of liberty are ripped to shreds, torn apart. Actually Scott Shane, one of the authors of the Times story, did write an article responding to the various criticisms that appeared. His ending was quite appropriate, I thought. He said something like, "Look, it's better than Dresden." Isn't it? Yeah. It's better than Dresden. So that's the bar: we don't want to just totally destroy everything. We'll just kill them because maybe someday they will harm us. Maybe. Meanwhile, well of course, what are we doing to them?

I think it's everything from that to surveillance systems that will be of unimaginable scale and character. And of course now data can be collected endlessly. In fact Obama supposedly has a data storage system being constructed in Utah somewhere where all kinds of data are being poured in. Who knows what? Probably all your emails, all your telephone conversations, someday what you're saying to people in the streets, where you've been lately, you know, who do you talk to, probably a ton of stuff like that will be there. Does it mean anything? Actually, probably not as much as many people fear. I don't think that that data is actually usable. In fact I think, I suspect it's usable only for one purpose: if the government for one reason or another is homing in on someone. They want to know something about this guy, well, then they can find data about him. But beyond that, history and experience suggest that there's not much that can be done about it.

Even 40 years ago, 50 years ago-I actually was involved at the time in trials of the resistance against the Vietnam War. I was an unindicted co-conspirator in one trial, coming up for trial myself, and following other trials. I got to look fairly carefully at what prosecutions were like based on FBI data about people. They were comical. I mean, there were cases where they picked the wrong people. They picked one person, they meant someone else. In one of the trials, I kept being confused with a guy named Hershel Cominsky; they could never get the Jewish names straight. Unbelievable. In fact, in the Spock trial they really angered two people: Mark Raskin, who they put on trial and he didn't want to be on trial, and Art Waskow, who did want to be put on trial and who they didn't put on trial. It's possible that Waskow was the person that they were looking for, but they couldn't distinguish him from Raskin. And they just couldn't put cases together.

The Spock trial is a very interesting case. I followed that one closely. That's the one where I was an unindicted co-conspirator, so I was sitting in with the defense team, talking to the lawyers and knew all the people. The prosecutor, being the FBI, put on such a rotten case in the prosecution that the defense decided just to rest. They didn't put on a defense, because the defense would have just tied together things that they hadn't found. It was a conspiracy trial; all they had to do was tie things together. And it was transparent because it was all happening totally publicly. That was the whole point. And the FBI apparently was simply ignoring everything that was public, not believing it, which is almost all there was. Almost all there was; not everything. And looking for some kind of secret connections to who-knows-what, North Korea or whatever was in their minds.

But here they have plenty of data, right in front of their eyes and they don't know how to use it. And I think that there is quite a lot of that.

SG: Getting back to that New York Times article that you mentioned: It outlines the process behind the "kill list" and the Pentagon-run meetings where they determine if a name can be added. Traditionally, presidents have kept a distance from legally murky CIA operations. But the Times article says that Obama is the final authority on a name being added to the list. Can you comment on the existence of the list and how close Obama is to the process?

NC: Well, any of these lists should be subjected to severe criticism. Including the terrorist list. Now there is a list of terrorists, you know, a State Department list of terrorists. Just take a look at it one day. Nelson Mandela was on the list until four years ago. There's a reason: Ronald Reagan was a strong supporter of apartheid, and one of the last, practically until the end. And certainly at the end of his term, he continued to support the apartheid regime. In 1988 the ANC, Mandela's African National Congress, was declared to be one of the more notorious terrorist groups in the world.

So that's justification for supporting the apartheid regime: It's part of Reagan's war on terror. He's the one that declared the war on terror, not Bush. Part of it was, "We have to defend the white regime against the terrorists of the ANC." Then Mandela stayed on the list. It's only in the last couple of years that he can travel to the United States without special authorization.

That's the terrorist list. There are other cases. So take, for example, Saddam Hussein. Saddam Hussein had been officially considered a terrorist. He was taken off the list by Ronald Reagan and his administration in 1982 because the United States wanted to provide aid and support to Saddam-which they incidentally did, and tried to cover up, for all sorts of things. But, ok, so he's taken off the list. They have an empty spot. So what do they do? They put Cuba on.

First of all, Cuba had been the target of more international terrorism than probably the rest of the world combined ever since Kennedy launched his terrorist war against Cuba. But it actually peaked in the late '70s. Shooting down an airliner and killing 70 people, blowing up embassies, all kinds of things. So here's the country that's the target of more terrorism than anyone else, and they are put on the terrorist list to replace Saddam Hussein, who we [later] have to eliminate because we don't want to support him.

What that tells you is quite incredible if you think it through. Of course, it's never discussed, which also tells you something. But that's the kind of question we should be asking about the terrorist list: Who is on it and why? Furthermore, what justification does it have?

It's a decision in the executive branch of the government, not subject to judicial or any other review. They say, "You're on the terrorist list!" Ok. You're targeted for anything.

And other lists are like that too. McCarthy's famous lists are minor examples. These are serious examples, these are official government lists. So to start with, we should put aside the idea that there is any sanctity, even authority, to the list. There isn't. These are just state decisions at the whim of the executive for whatever reasons they may have. Not the kind of thing you ever have any respect for. Certainly not in this case.

SG: Sometime in the distant future, could there be blame placed directly on Obama legally just because of his close association with the kill list?

NC: I'm sure he knows it. I suspect that's one of the reasons he's been very scrupulous about exculpating all previous administrations. So no prosecution of Dick Cheney or George Bush or Rumsfeld for torture, let alone for aggression. We can't even talk about that. Apparently the US is just exempt from any charges of aggression.

Actually, it's not too well known, but as far back as the '40s the US exempted itself. So the United States helped establish the modern World Court in 1946, but it added a reservation: That the United States cannot be charged with violation of international treaties. What they had in mind, of course, was the UN Charter, the foundation of modern international law. And the OAS Charter, charter of the Organization of American States. The OAS Charter has a very strong statement that they demand of any Latin American countries against any form of intervention. Clearly, the US wasn't going to be limited by that. And the UN Charter, along with the Nuremberg principle, which entered into it, had a very harsh condemnation of aggression, which is pretty well defined. And they understood that, of course. They could read the words of the US Special Prosecutor at Nuremberg, Justice Robert Jackson, who spoke pretty eloquently to the tribunal and said when they handed the death penalty to the people, primarily for committing what they considered the "supreme international crime"-namely aggression, but lots of others-that they were "handing these people a poisoned chalice, and if we sip from it, we must be subject to the same judgment or else the whole proceedings are a farce." Not well said, but it should be obvious. But there's a reservation that excludes the US.

Actually, the US is excluded from other treaties too. Essentially all. If you take a look at the few international conventions that are signed and ratified, they almost always have an exception saying "not applicable to the United States." It's called non-self executing. Meaning, this needs specific legislation to exact it. This is true, for example, for the Genocide Convention. And it came up in the courts. After the bombing of Yugoslavia in 1999, Yugoslavia did bring a charge against NATO to the court, and the court accepted the charge. The rules of the court are that a state is only subject to charges if it accepts court jurisdiction. And the NATO countries all accepted court jurisdiction, with one exception. The US addressed the court and pointed out that the US is not subject to the Genocide Convention. One of the charges was genocide. So the US is not subject to the Genocide Convention because of our usual exemption.

So the immunity from prosecution is not just practiced, and of course the culture-it couldn't be even imagined in the culture, which is an interesting comment about the culture. But also even just legally.

In fact, the same question might be asked about torture. The Bush administration has been accused, widely and prominently, of implementing torture. But if it ever came to trial I think a defense lawyer might have a stand to take: The US never really signed the UN Torture Convention. It did sign and ratify it, but only after it was rewritten by the Senate. And it was rewritten specifically to exclude the forms of torture used by the CIA, which they had borrowed from the Russian KGB.

It's well studied by Alfred McCoy, one of the leading scholars that has dealt with torture. He points out that the KGB/CIA tortures, they apparently discovered that the best way to turn a person into a vegetable is what's called "mental torture." Not electrodes to the genitals, but the kinds of things that you see in Guantanamo and Abu Ghraib, which are called mental tortures. They don't leave marks on the body, essentially. That's the best way and we do them. In fact, we do it in supermax prisons all the time. And so the treaty was rewritten to exclude the kind of things that the CIA does and that we do and in fact are done routinely at home, although that didn't come up. And it was then signed into domestic legislation, I think under Clinton.

So is the Bush Administration even guilty of torture under international law? It's not entirely obvious. In fact it's not entirely obvious who would be. To get back to your original question, I think Obama has serious reasons for making sure that, as he puts it, "it's time to look forward, not backward." That's the standard position of a criminal.

SG: In some of the documents that were leaked and obtained in the last month, one of the things published in the Times and in McClatchy talked about how the CIA had reduced its use of black sites in part because of fear of prosecution, that their officials might be charged as war criminals. So considering what you've just described, why would the CIA be afraid enough to adjust its policies?

NC: Well, what they're afraid of, I would suspect, is the kind of things that Henry Kissinger is apparently afraid of when he travels abroad. There is a concept of "universal jurisdiction" which is pretty widely held. It means if a war criminal, a person who has carried out really serious war crimes, major crimes-doesn't have to be war crimes-arrives in your territory, that country has a right to bring him to judicial process. And it's called "universal jurisdiction." It's kind of a shady area of international affairs, but it has been applied. The Pinochet case in London was a famous case. The British court decided that yes, they had a right to send him back to Chile for trial.

And there are other cases. By now, for example, there are recent cases where Israeli high officials have been wary of coming to London, and in some cases their trips have been called off because they could be subject to universal jurisdiction. And it's been reported, at least, that the same is true of some of Kissinger's concerns. And I think that's probably what he's referring to. You can't be sure that . . . you know, power's getting more diversified in the world. The US is still overwhelmingly powerful, but nothing like it once was. There are many examples of that. And you can't be sure what others will do.

And a striking example of the restrictions of US power in this regard came out in a study that was reported, but I don't think that the really important part of it was reported-that's a study on globalizing torture put out by the Open Society Forum a couple of weeks ago. You'll find it in the press. It was a study of rendition. Rendition, incidentally, is a major crime that, again, goes back to Magna Carta, explicitly. Sending people across the seas for torture. But that's open policy now. And this was a study of which countries participated in it. And it turned out that it was over 50 countries, most of Europe, Middle East, which is where they were sent for torture. That's where the dictators were, Asia and Africa. One continent was totally missing. Not a single country was willing to participate in this major crime: Latin America. And one person did point this out, Greg Grandin, a Latin Americanist at NYU, but he's the only person I saw who pointed it out.

That's extremely important. Latin America used to be the "backyard." They did what we said or else we overthrew the governments. Well, furthermore, during these years it was one of the global centers of torture. But now US power has declined sufficiently so that the traditional, most reliable servants are simply saying no. It's striking. And it's not the only example. So, going back to universal jurisdiction, you can't really be sure what others will do.

You know, I have to say, I never expected much of Obama, to tell you the truth, but the one thing that surprised me is relentless assaults on civil liberties. I just don't understand them.


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