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January 8th, 2009
 | 08:57 pm [Yes, the icon is appropriate.]
Supporters of the homophobic Proposition 8 in California want to change state law that requires name, address, and employer's name of anyone contributing to a political campaign.
Also in California, a database that will tell you who is laying off workers. And something on just what those laid-off workers feel about Gov. Ahnold.
Eyewitnesses speak of the slaughter of innocent civilians by the Israelis in Gaza.
The case for prosecuting war crimes in the Bush Administration (video.) And Congressman John Conyers wants to investigate the legitimacy of Bush policies. Perhaps that will include something of his abuse of military veterans.
How the US Army Field Manual still codifies torture -- what can be done and how acceptable it is.
In early September 2006, the U.S. Department of Defense, reeling from at least a dozen investigations into detainee abuse by interrogators, released Directive 2310.01E. This directive was advertised as an overhaul and improvement on earlier detainee operations and included a newly rewritten Army Field Manual for Human Intelligence Collector Operations (FM-2-22-3). This guidebook for interrogators was meant to set a humane standard for U.S. interrogators worldwide, a standard that was respectful of the Geneva Conventions and other U.S. and international laws concerning treatment of prisoners.
While George W. Bush was signing a presidential directive allowing the CIA to conduct other, secret "enhanced interrogation techniques," which may or may not have included waterboarding, the new AFM was sold to the public as a return to civilized norms, in regards to interrogation.
Before long, opponents of U.S. torture policy were championing the new AFM as an appropriate "single-standard" model of detainee treatment. Support for implementing the revised AFM, as a replacement for the hated "enhanced" techniques earlier championed by Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and the CIA, began to appear in legislation out of Congress, in the literature of human-rights organizations and in newspaper editorials. Some rights groups have felt the new AFM offered some improvements by banning repellent interrogation tactics, such as waterboarding, use of nudity, military dogs and stress positions. It was believed the AFM cemented the concept of command responsibility for infractions of the law.
There was only one problem: the AFM did not eliminate torture. Despite what it said, it did not adhere to the Geneva Conventions. Even worse, it took the standard operating procedure of Camp Delta at Guantanamo Bay and threatened to expand it all over the world....
The Army mistakenly sends out 7,000 condolence letters addressed to "Dear John Doe".
I have written before about the Family, the ultrafarright Dominionist group that has its talons deep into the Republican Party. What I did not have information on before was this: Hillary Clinton has been involved with The Family, aka The Fellowship, for some years now. Not just with them at the National Prayer Breakfast, but as a member of a "cell church". Read these links. You need to know this. I freely admit that I like Hillary, but I do not at all like The Family, what they do or what they stand for, and I'm extremely concerned at this connection. Each of the links in this section has many other links within it; please read at least some of them. It's best to be well informed when dealing with such an organized and methodical political antagonist -- and do not mistake this: the Family are homophobic, anti-union (or any other bottom-up organized group), triumphalist and intent on taking over the US government (among others) for their version of God.
10 movie endings spoiled by history. 11 movies saved by historical inaccuracy.
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InsaneJournal |