Dangerous Game
February 3, 2009 at 7:45 pm | Posted in Obama, Terrorism | Leave a commentTags: Guantanamo, Obama, Terrorism
Wall Street Journall Op/Ed page hits two really great points in two articles. Playing politics about prisoners while a war is still being waged is a dangerous game.
One piece argues that if waterboarding is the unconscionable act you said it was just months ago, outlaw it:
“When it is argued, for example, that Navy Seals have undergone waterboarding as part of their training, the response is, well, waterboarding someone as part of his military training is different from waterboarding someone in custody. Yes: Of course it is. In the real world, circumstances and context are crucial to our moral judgments.” Read more…
And then this piece that wonders if anyone’s going to look at the vapid arrogance and unsupportable illogic of Obama’s prettyspeech:
“Mr. Obama argued that it was just by such steps that we strengthened our security. In his own words: “It is precisely our ideals that give us the strength and the moral high ground to be able to effectively deal with the unthinking violence that we see emanating from terrorist organizations around the world.”
What can this mean? What moral high ground, exactly, would have enabled us to deter the designs of the religious fanatics in search of martyrdom and the slaughter of as many Americans as possible on September 11?” Read more….
Sedition?
February 3, 2009 at 6:52 pm | Posted in Obama, Terrorism | Leave a commentTags: Obama, Terrorism
I might be talking down to you, but I recognize that some of you – for example, our President – have no idea what the Logan Act is.
Cutnpasted from law.jrank.org:
The Logan Act (18 U.S.C.A. ยง 953 [1948]) is a single federal statute making it a crime for a citizen to confer with foreign governments against the interests of the United States. Specifically, it prohibits citizens from negotiating with other nations on behalf of the United States without authorization.
Congress established the Logan Act in 1799, less than one year after passage of the ALIEN AND SEDITION ACTS, which authorized the arrest and deportation of ALIENS and prohibited written communication defamatory to the U.S. government. The 1799 act was named after Dr. George Logan. A prominent Republican and Quaker from Pennsylvania, Logan did not draft or introduce the legislation that bears his name, but was involved in the political climate that precipitated it.
***So. If you’re Barack Obama, and you’re not the President – in fact, you’re so not the President that you go out of your way to announce that you are not the President – why are you negotiating with al Quaida and directly disobeying the Logan Act? Arrogance? Stupidity? Amateur Hour? All 3?
Why We Have Guantanamo
January 23, 2009 at 10:12 am | Posted in Terrorism | Leave a commentTags: Guantanamo, Terrorism
Because terrorists are bad. And they cannot be rehabilitated. And they want to kill me and my children.
Thanking George Bush
January 22, 2009 at 11:33 pm | Posted in George W. Bush | Leave a commentTags: George W. Bush, Terrorism, Torture, War
I really like Dennis Miller’s words here. Well put. It reminds me of my mother, a German survivor of World War II telling me or anyone who’d listen that the Gulf War wasn’t a war. To her, wars are when hundreds of thousands of civilians perish. (And another 780,000 are injured). (And that’s civilians – in Germany alone.)
And, torture that includes water dripping on your nose that doesn’t kill you…doesn’t constitute torture to some.
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