A small miscellany

Posted on January 12, 2008

Guantanamo detainees ‘have no right to sue Pentagon’: “A US appeals court ruled that four former Guantanamo prisoners, all British citizens, had no right to sue top Pentagon officials for torture and violations of their religious rights. The decision by a three-judge panel to dismiss the lawsuit was issued on the sixth anniversary of the arrival of the first detainees at the US military prison at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba.”

The Latest Version of Hillary Clinton: “Going into the New Hampshire primary, Hillary Clinton implored voters to keep a level head and not get carried away with a passing crush. Unable to match Barack Obama’s inspiring oratory, she sniped, “You campaign in poetry, but you govern in prose.” But after winning Tuesday, she was all gooey sentiment: “I felt like we all spoke from our hearts, and I’m so gratified you responded.” Head, heart-what does it matter, as long as she wins? If it took a show of tears to elicit sympathy from New Hampshirites, Sister Frigidaire (as she was known in her youth) was prepared to engineer a melting thaw. And it worked. The only thing sufficient to summon a wave of emotion, though, was the prospect of losing. The Clintons often manufacture shows of feeling-remember when Bill, caught smiling after the death of Commerce Secretary Ron Brown, feigned tears when he noticed a TV camera? Or when Hillary, after coming in third in Iowa, gave a victory speech sporting an eerily immovable smile? But they’re always completely sincere in their self-pity or anger, both of which were on display after the Iowa debacle”.

Voter ID requirement may survive: “The Supreme Court appeared unmoved yesterday by arguments that an Indiana law requiring voters to present photo identification imposes an unconstitutional burden. Some justices, however, appeared to search for a middle ground on the divisive and partisan political issue. And the court’s questioning during an hourlong oral argument broke quickly along its own ideological divide. But the justice most often in recent years to play the decisive role – Anthony Kennedy – made it clear that he did not share the challengers’ view of the burden that producing a photo ID imposes. “You want us to invalidate a statute on the ground that it’s a minor inconvenience to a small percentage of voters?” Kennedy asked Washington lawyer Paul Smith, who argued the case on behalf of the Indiana Democratic Party, American Civil Liberties Union, and other Hoosier community groups and individuals.”

Army tosses Abu Ghraib conviction: “The Army has thrown out the conviction of the only officer court-martialed in the Abu Ghraib scandal, bringing an end to the four-year investigation and drawing complaints from human rights activists of a Pentagon whitewash. Lt. Col. Steven L. Jordan was cleared this week of any criminal wrongdoing by Maj. Gen. Richard J. Rowe, commander of the Military District of Washington. Jordan was instead given an administrative reprimand, a blot on his record. Barring any startling new information, the decision means no officers or civilian leaders will be held criminally responsible for the prisoner abuse that embarrassed the U.S. military and inflamed the Muslim world. Jordan, 51, of Fredericksburg, Va., was acquitted at his court-martial in August of charges he failed to supervise the 11 lower-ranking soldiers convicted for their roles in the abuse, which included the photographing of Iraqi prisoners in painful and sexually humiliating positions. But he was found guilty of disobeying an order not to talk about the investigation, and the jury recommended a criminal reprimand, the lightest possible punishment.”

Posted by John Ray

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» Filed Under ACLU, Elections, News, War On Terror


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One Response to “A small miscellany”

  1. Kerwin on January 12th, 2008 10:15 am

    As far as the Guantanamo decision it is about time the federal courts figured out that Aliens are not ourselves or our posterity. On the other hand I find the Abu Ghraib decision to be highly questionable. Those pictures displays actions which were bold and clearly observable and in some cases looked widespread and I greatly doubt an officer who was anything but criminally negligent could have missed noticing something.