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FATAL VISION: The Deeper Evil Behind The Detainee Bill, by Chris Floyd












 

 

 

 

AND  NOW  THE  APOCALYPSE!

Living In A World Full Of Lies

 

 

 

 

International A.N.S.W.E.R. Coalition
Click Here to A.ct N.ow and Ask
Click here to go to International A.N.S.W.E.R. (Act Now to Stop War and End Racism) Coalitions website!
S.top W.ar and E.nd R.acism!





"Dissent is the  ESSENTIAL

aspect of patriotism"!

--Thomas Jefferson







[PLEASE TAKE NOTICE: All entries are in descending order by the date(s) they were posted, and in some cases in ascending order by the date(s) written.]







 

The American flag, the U.S. Constitution and the Bill of Rights have now been torn to shreads. "Rest In Peace (RIP)", Freedom and Liberty. RIP, "the experiment in democracy".

 

We have watched in dumb amazement (those of us who have realized what is really going on, that is) as for the past five years the Bill of Rights, the U.S. Constitution, liberty, and freedom have been step by step, systematically eviscerated, first with the so-called "USA P.A.T.R.I.O.T. Act (those who criticize it supposedly aren't patriots)", and then with the latest afront on domestic freedom and liberty, the "Military Commissions Act of 2006," also known among other names as the "Detainee Bill", passed by an almost completely cowed Senate in the dead of night on Friday, the 29th day of September, 2006.

 

Now NONE OF US is safe. Not civil libertarians, not dissenters, not protesters of even the mildest variety (as virtually everything is now considered "terrorism"), and not even those blind worshippers of the U.S. government or its agents; because, if someone decides they don't like you, or gets jealous or resentful of you, all they need do is CLAIM you criticized the government, defended "rights", felt that certain force used against someone was excessive, or committed some other equally innocent "perceived threatening conduct" (some of the federal government's favorite wording that they now use for those who exercise their inalienable, immutable, inviolable First Amendment rights of Freedom of Speech, Belief and Dissent to disagree with their government), and you will very likely be "disappeared" into custody, stripped of U.S. citizenship, and be interro(r)gated, intimidated, humiliated, terrorized, tortured, and/or very possibly murdered, all without "Due Process of Law" under the Fifth and Fourteen Amendments of the U.S. Constitution, or a fair, unbiased hearing, access to an impartial lawyer, court, judge, or jury; and, if you live through this process, you could be kept secretly imprisoned forever without access to ANYONE important to you. This is NO exageration WHATSOVER; and, if "We, The People" don't repeal this horrific law, or the U.S. Supreme court doesn't overturn it, this is the END of our Republic, of Democracy, and of ALL Liberty and Freedom in "the land of the free, and the home of the brave", and THE END OF ALL protection(s) from a capricious, out of control, dictatorial government.

 

So, you see, the inviolable freedoms and liberties that we have so taken for granted, and that most Americans now have so little understanding of the supreme importance of, much to our grave detriment, were not overturned by "Islamo-Fascist terrorists", nor by protesting, dissenting U.S. citizens, nor journalists critical of the government, nor any other equally illusory, contrived, manufactured, engineered, and/or U.S.-government-created, state-sponsored "enemy(ies)", agents, assets, patsies, bogeymen, infiltra(i)tors, disinfo-agents, detractors, distractors, naysayers, actors, shills, trolls, hackers, informers, spies, entrappers, and/or agents provocateur, etc., but this act of true terrorism was carried out by the very people in our own government who are literally sworn to uphold and protect the U.S. Constitution "from all enemies, foreign AND DOMESTIC", including from THEMSELVES and other tyrannical, 'absolutely despotic' (to loosely quote the Declaration of Independence) forces in that very government; and the vast majority of them have COMPLETELY failed us and thrown EVERY SINGLE PERSON in this great country OF OURS into limitless danger and threat(s) by that government to the very safety of EACH AND EVERY ONE OF OUR LIVES.

 

The following is very likely the best article on this subject that has thus far been written, at least as far as I am aware; and, therefore, I share it with you at this time to further clarify just how truly catastrophic, life-threatening and consequential the situation we are now in actually is for every single man, woman, child, and little baby in this entire country, and ultimately in this entire world. The world-renowned True Journalist who wrote this great article, Chris Floyd, is also a True Hero and an exceedingly courageous human being for writing such an accurate article of warning to world-citizens planet-wide, and such an accurate portrayal of the extremely dire situation the U.S. and the world are in as a direct result of the subject matter it covers, as follows:

 

 

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Read more of Chris Floyd's columns.

 

Go to Original.

 

 

Click here to go to Chris Floyd's blog, 'Empire Burlesque'!    FATAL VISION: THE DEEPER EVIL
    BEHIND THE DETAINEE BILL
    ("Big Brother" Government
    Is Now Here In The U.S.)
    By Chris Floyd, T.O. UK Reporter
    t r u t h o u t | Perspective
    Tuesday, 3 October 2006
    [Copyright (c) 2006 in the
    U.S.A. and Internationally
    by t r u t h o u t (.org),
    Empire Burlesque (Chris' blog)
    and/or Chris Floyd.
    All rights reserved.]

 

 

Click here to go buy Chris Floyd's book, 'Empire Burlesque: High Crimes and Low Comedy in the Bush Imperium'!

    (This is a slightly revised version of a piece that first appeared on the Oct. 2nd edition of Truthout.org .)

    There is no week nor day nor hour when tyranny may not enter upon this country -- if the people lose their confidence in themselves -- and lose their roughness and spirit of defiance.

--- Walt Whitman

 

    I.

 

    It was a dark hour indeed (on Friday, September 29th, 2006) when the United States Senate voted to end the constitutional republic and transform the country into a "Leader-State," giving the president and his agents the power to capture, torture and imprison forever anyone -- American citizens included -- whom they arbitrarily decide is an "enemy combatant." This also includes those who merely give "terrorism" some kind of "support," defined so vaguely that many experts say it could encompass legal advice, innocent gifts to charities or even political opposition to US government policy within its draconian strictures.

 

 

    All of this is bad enough -- a sickening and cowardly surrender of liberty not seen in a major Western democracy since the Enabling Act passed by the German Reichstag in March 1933. But it is by no means the full extent of our degradation. In reality, the darkness is deeper, and more foul, than most people imagine. For in addition to the dictatorial powers of seizure and torment given by Congress on Thursday to George W. Bush -- powers he had already seized and exercised for five years anyway, even without this fig leaf of sham legality -- there is a far more sinister imperial right that Bush has claimed -- and used -- openly, without any demur or debate from Congress at all: ordering the "extrajudicial killing" of anyone on earth that he and his deputies decide -- arbitrarily, without charges, court hearing, formal evidence, or appeal -- is an "enemy combatant."

 

    That's right; from the earliest days of the Terror War -- September 17, 2001, to be exact -- Bush has claimed the peremptory power of life and death over the entire world. If he says you're an enemy of America, you are. If he wants to imprison you and torture you, he can. And if he decides you should die, he'll kill you. This is not hyperbole, liberal paranoia, or "conspiracy theory": it's simply a fact, reported by the mainstream media, attested by senior administration figures, recorded in official government documents -- and boasted about by the president himself, in front of Congress and a national television audience.

 

    And although the Republic-snuffing act just passed by Congress does not directly address Bush's royal prerogative of murder, it nonetheless strengthens it and enshrines it in law. For the measure sets forth clearly that the designation of an "enemy combatant" is left solely to the executive branch; neither Congress nor the courts have any say in the matter. When this new law is coupled with the existing "Executive Orders" authorizing "lethal force" against arbitrarily designated "enemy combatants," it becomes, quite literally, a license to kill -- with the seal of Congressional approval.

 

    How arbitrary is this process by which all our lives and liberties are now governed? Dave Niewert at Orcinus has unearthed a remarkable admission of its totally capricious nature. In an December 2002 story in the Washington Post, then-Solicitor General Ted Olson described the anarchy at the heart of the process with admirable frankness:

 

    "[There is no] requirement that the executive branch spell out its criteria for determining who qualifies as an enemy combatant," Olson argues.

 

    "'There won't be 10 rules that trigger this or 10 rules that end this,' Olson said in the interview. 'There will be judgments and instincts and evaluations and implementations that have to be made by the executive that are probably going to be different from day to day, depending on the circumstances.'"

 

    In other words, what is safe to do or say today might imperil your freedom or your life tomorrow. You can never know if you are on the right side of the law, because the "law" is merely the whim of the Leader and his minions: their "instincts" determine your guilt or innocence, and these flutterings in the gut can change from day to day. This radical uncertainty is the very essence of despotism -- and it is now, formally and officially, the guiding principle of the United States government.

 

    And underlying this edifice of tyranny is the prerogative of presidential murder. Perhaps the enormity of this monstrous perversion of law and morality has kept it from being fully comprehended. It sounds unbelievable to most people: a president ordering hits like a Mafia don? But that is our reality, and has been for five years. To overcome what seems to be a widespread cognitive dissonance over this concept, we need only examine the record -- a record, by the way, taken entirely from publicly available sources in the mass media. There's nothing secret or contentious about it, nothing that any ordinary citizen could not know -- if they choose to know it.


 

    II.

 

    Six days after the 9/11 attacks, George W. Bush signed a "presidential finding" authorizing the CIA to kill those individuals whom he had marked for death as terrorists. This in itself was not an entirely radical innovation; Bill Clinton's White House legal team had drawn up memos asserting the president's right to issue "an order to kill an individual enemy of the United States in self-defense," despite the legal prohibitions against assassination, the Washington Post reported in October 2001. The Clinton team based this ruling on the "inherent powers" of the "Commander in Chief" -- that mythical, ever-elastic construct that Bush has evoked over and over to defend his own unconstitutional usurpations.

 

    The practice of "targeted killing" was apparently never used by Clinton, however; despite the pro-assassination memos, Clinton followed the traditional presidential practice of bombing the hell out of a bunch of civilians whenever he wanted to lash out at some recalcitrant leader or international outlaw -- as in his bombing of the Sudanese pharmaceutical factory in 1998, or the two massive strikes he launched against Iraq in 1993 and 1998, or indeed the death and ruin that was deliberately inflicted on civilian infrastructure in Serbia during that nation's collective punishment for the crimes of Slobodan Milosevic. Here, was following the example set by George H.W. Bush, who killed hundreds, perhaps thousands, of Panamanian civilians in his illegal arrest of Manuel Noriega in 1988, and Ronald Reagan, who killed Moamar Gadafy's adopted 2-year-old daughter and 100 other civilians in a punitive strike on Libya in 1986.

 

    Junior Bush, of course, was about to outdo all those blunderbuss strokes with his massive air attacks on Afghanistan, which killed thousands of civilians, and the later orgy of death and destruction in Iraq. But he also wanted the power to kill individuals at will. At first, the assassination program was restricted to direct orders from the president aimed at specific targets, as suggested by the Clinton memos. But soon the arbitrary power of life and death was delegated to agents in the field, after Bush signed orders allowing CIA assassins to kill targets without seeking presidential approval for each attack, the Washington Post reported in December 2002. Nor was it necessary any longer for the president to approve each new name added to the target list; the "security organs" could designate "enemy combatants" and kill them as they saw fit. However, Bush was always keen to get the details about the agency's wetwork, administration officials assured the Post.

 

    The first officially confirmed use of this power was the killing of an American citizen, along with several foreign nationals, by a CIA drone missile in Yemen on November 3, 2002. A similar strike occurred on December 4, 2005, when a CIA missile destroyed a house and purportedly killed Abu Hamza Rabia, a suspected al-Qaeda figure. But the only bodies found at the site were those of two children, the houseowner's son and nephew, Reuters reports. The grieving father denied any connection to terrorism. An earlier CIA strike on another house missed Rabia but killed his wife and children, Pakistani officials reported.

 

    However, there is simply no way of knowing at this point how many people have been killed by American agents operating outside all judicial process. Most of the assassinations are carried out in secret: quietly, professionally. As a Pentagon document uncovered by the New Yorker in December 2002 revealed, the death squads must be "small and agile," and "able to operate clandestinely, using a full range of official and non-official cover arrangements to ... enter countries surreptitiously."

 

    What's more, there are strong indications that the Bush administration has outsourced some of the contracts to outside operators. In the original Post story about the assassinations -- in those first heady weeks after 9/11, when administration officials were much more open about "going to the dark side," as Cheney boasted on national television -- Bush insiders told the paper that "it is also possible that the instrument of targeted killings will be foreign agents, the CIA's term for nonemployees who act on its behalf.

 

    Here we find a deadly echo of the "rendition" program that has sent so many captives to torture pits in Syria, Egypt and elsewhere -- including many whose innocence has been officially established, such as the Canadian businessman Maher Arar, German national Khalid El-Masri, UK native Mozzam Begg and many others. They had been subjected to imprisonment and torture despite their innocence, because of intelligence "mistakes." How many have fallen victim to Bush's hit squads on similar shaky grounds?

 

    So here we are. Congress has just entrenched the principle of Bush's "unitary executive" dictatorship into law; and it is this principle that undergirds the assassination program. As I wrote in December, it's hard to believe that any genuine democracy would accept a claim by its leader that he could have anyone killed simply by labeling them an "enemy." It's hard to believe that any adult with even the slightest knowledge of history or human nature could countenance such unlimited, arbitrary power, knowing the evil it is bound to produce. Yet this is exactly what the great and good in America have done.

 

    But this should come as no surprise. They have known about it all along, and have not only countenanced Bush's death squad, but even celebrated it. I'll end with one more passage from that December article, which sadly is even more apt for our degraded reality today. It was a depiction of the one of the most revolting scenes in recent American history: Bush's state of the Union address in January 2003, delivered live to the nation during the final warmongering frenzy before the rape of Iraq:

 

    Trumpeting his successes in the Terror War, Bush claimed that "more than 3,000 suspected terrorists" had been arrested worldwide -- "and many others have met a different fate." His face then took on the characteristic leer, the strange, sickly half-smile it acquires whenever he speaks of killing people: "Let's put it this way. They are no longer a problem."

 

    In other words, the suspects -- and even Bush acknowledged they were only suspects -- had been murdered. Lynched. Killed by agents operating unsupervised in that shadow world where intelligence, terrorism, politics, finance and organized crime meld together in one amorphous, impenetrable mass. Killed on the word of a dubious informer, perhaps: a tortured captive willing to say anything to end his torment, a business rival, a personal foe, a bureaucrat looking to impress his superiors, a paid snitch in need of cash, a zealous crank pursuing ethnic, tribal or religious hatreds -- or any other purveyor of the garbage data that is coin of the realm in the shadow world.

 

    Bush proudly held up this hideous system as an example of what he called "the meaning of American justice." And the assembled legislators ... applauded. Oh, how they applauded! They roared with glee at the leering little man's bloodthirsty, B-movie machismo. They shared his sneering contempt for law -- our only shield, however imperfect, against the blind, brute, ignorant, ape-like force of raw power. Not a single voice among them was raised in protest against this tyrannical machtpolitik: not that night, not the next day, not ever.

 

    And now, in September 2006, we know they will never raise that protest. Oh, a few Democrats stood up at the last minute on Thursday to posture nobly about the dangers of the detainee bill -- but only when they knew that it was certain to pass, when they had already given up their one weapon against it, the filibuster, in exchange for permission from their Republican masters to offer amendments that they also knew would fail. Had they been offering such speeches since October 2001, when the lineaments of Bush's presidential tyranny were already clear -- or at any other point during the systematic dismantling of America's liberties over the past five years -- these fine words might have had some effect.

 

    Now the killing will go on. The tyranny that has entered upon the country will grow stronger, more brazen; the darkness will deepen. Whitman, thou should'st be living at this hour; America has need of thee. (Subtitle and/or emphasis added by Wolf Britain.)

 



 

    Chris Floyd is an American journalist residing in the UK. His work has appeared in print and online in venues all over the world, including The Nation, Counterpunch, Columbia Journalism Review, the Christian Science Monitor, Il Manifesto, the Moscow Times, and many others. He is the author of Empire Burlesque: High Crimes and Low Comedy in the Bush Imperium , and is co-founder and editor of the "Empire Burlesque" political blog.

 

  ________

 

(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. t r u t h o u t has no affiliation whatsoever with the originator of this article nor is t r u t h o u t endorsed or sponsored by the originator.)

 

"Go to Original" links are provided as a convenience to our readers and allow for verification of authenticity. However, as originating pages are often updated by their originating host sites, the versions posted on TO may not match the versions our readers view when clicking the "Go to Original" links.

 

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Music....

I am listening to Something Corporate right now.  I hate being in this kind of mood. I dont even know what it is. It just kind of sucks I am writting right now but its not really helping. I just need something?... I am obsessed with the song Konstantine by them...its great. Here it is:

 

I can't imagine all the people that you know
And the places that you go
When the lights are turned down low
And I don't understand all the things you've seen
But I'm slipping in-between
You and your big dreams
It's always you, in my big dreams

And you tell me that its over
Wake up lying in a patch of four leaf clovers
And your restless, and I'm naked
You've gotta get out
You can't stand to see me shakin'
No, could u let me go?
I didn't think so

And you don't wanna be here in the future
So you say the present's just a pleasant
Interruption to the past
And you don't wanna look much closer
Cause you're afraid to find out all this hope
You had sent into the sky, by now, had, crashed
And it did because of me

And then you bring me home
Afraid to find out that you're alone, oh
And I'm sleeping in your living room
But we don't have much room to live

And I had dreams, In them I learned to play guitar
Maybe cross the country, become a rock star
And there was hope in me that I could take you there
But damn it, you're so young
Well I don't think I care
And if I hurt you, then I'm sorry
Please don't think that this was easy

And then you bring me home
Cause we both know what it's like to be alone, oh
And I'm dreaming in your living room
But we don't have much room to live

And Konstantine is walking down the stairs
Doesn't she look good standing in her underwear?
And I was thinking, what I was thinking
We've been drinking and it doesn't get me anywhere

My Konstantine came walking down the stairs
And all that I could do was touch her long, blonde hair
And I've been thinkin’, It hurts me thinking
That these nights when we were drinking
No they never got us anywhere, No

This is because I can spell confusion with a 'K'
And I can like it
It's to dying in another's arms
And why I had to try it
Its to Jimmy Eat World
And those nights in my car
When the first star you see
May not be a star
I'm not your star
Isn't that what you said
What you thought this song meant

And if this is what it takes
Just to lie with my mistakes
And live with what I did to you
All the hell I put you through
I always catch the clock
It's 11:11, and now you wanna talk
It's not hard to dream
You'll always be My Konstantine

My Konstantine
They'll never hurt you like I do
No they'll never hurt you like I do
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no

This is to a girl
Who got into my head
With all the pretty things she did
Hey, you know
You keep me up in bed

This is to a girl
Who got into my head
With all these fucked up things I did
Hey, maybe, baby
You could keep me up in bed

My Konstantine
You spin around me like a dream
We played out on this movie screen
And I said
Did you know I missed you?
Did you know I missed you?
Did you know I missed you?
Did you know I missed you?
Did you know I miss you?
Did you know I miss you?
Did you know I miss you?
I miss you

And then you bring me home
And we go to sleep
But this time not alone
And I know, and you'll kiss me in your living room
I know, I know you miss me in your living room
Cause these nights I think
Maybe that I miss you in my living room

But we don't have much room
I said does anybody need that room
Because we all need a little more room
To live

My Konstantine

 
 
 

   
MERCENARIES
Mercenary is a person who takes part in an armed conflict who is not a national of a Party to the conflict and "is motivated to take part in the hostilities essentially by the desire for private gain and, in fact, is promised, by or on behalf of a Party to the conflict, material compensation substantially in excess of that promised or paid to combatants of similar ranks and functions in the armed forces of that Party". Being a Mercenary is not easy, they believe in whatever they do, and requires total dedication to any mission assigned, and that they take great pride in carrying the mission out successfully. As a result, the assumption that a mercenary is essentially motivated by money, the term "mercenary" carries negative connotations.

There is a blur in the distinction between a "mercenary" and a "FOREIGN VOLUNTEER", when the primary motive of a soldier in a foreign army is uncertain. For instance the FRENCH FOREIGN LEGION and the GURKHAS are not mercenaries under the LAWS OF WAR, although they may meet many of the requirements of Article 47 they are exempt under clause 47(e), but some journalists do describe them as mercenaries.

Article 47. Mercenaries

1. A mercenary shall not have the right to be a combatant or a prisoner of war.

2. A mercenary is any person who:

(a) is specially recruited locally or abroad in order to fight in an armed conflict;

(b) does, in fact, take a direct part in the hostilities;

(c) is motivated to take part in the hostilities essentially by the desire for private gain and, in fact, is promised, by or on behalf of a Party to the conflict, material compensation substantially in excess of that promised or paid to combatants of similar ranks and functions in the armed forces of that Party;

(d) is neither a national of a Party to the conflict nor a resident of territory controlled by a Party to the conflict;

(e) is not a member of the armed forces of a Party to the conflict; and

(f) has not been sent by a State which is not a Party to the conflict on official duty as a member of its armed forces.

The term Mercenary is still used generally in third world countries even though the title of Mercenary has changed since then to Executive, Manager and some titles only known to the elect for security reasons. Executive positions range from many specialties .. and require that newbies have above-average academic skills and advanced training in short-term and long-term OPS, sleep deprevation, all weather conditions and certain tactics to use when fighting.

Some missions and training may require the protection of vital or sensitive sites or people, Identification of threats or risks, planning and strategies, Intelligence gathering, weaponry, demolitions, language skills, surveillance, covert OPS, and more before becoming certified as a member of a particular Executive Group.

The Executive is generally paid well and the turn-over rate of Executives are minimal .. mission successes or statistics for losses are not recorded publicly or announced. This is a group of people that take great pride in their professions.

Jim Heitmeyer
 
 
   
 

Starbucks

The dialog below is from the Starbucks Gossip website.  The yellow text is what I wrote and the black text is what some cunt named "Stacy" wrote.  This is why I don't like Starbucks, people.

 

 

 

Won't be fooled again:

Just so you know - and I believe you are halfway there - here's how it's going to work.

Some of the people on here are going to tell you to go away and they are eventually going to tell you to f*ck off (because you are censored otherwise) and they are going to most likely call you an asshole or douchebag.

Some of the people here take what you say about Starbucks personally. I don't understand it because they are employed by the company...it didn't give birth to them. I'd like to think for every ten or so people here who say you shouldn't have the right to speak your mind - that there is another one or two that are fine with it and are willing to discuss things in an intelligent way.

 

Fellow baristas,

Do yourselves a favor and ignore Mr Charbucks and his friend Fivebucks. They come on these websites looking to piss someone off. They're bottom-feeders who get off on getting a rise out of people. These are the type of people who spend their entire life calling every other single person on the face of the Earth a dumbass because in their warped minds, they know all.

If people want to hate Starbucks, let them. For every 2 people who hate us, there are 8 more who love us. Our customers love us.

 

Well as I recall "STACY", what I was saying, is that one can't blame all of the increase on gas. Someone earlier had mentioned gas numerous times, as if to blame the increase mainly on that - and that isn't true.

Now if you'd like to insult me, go right on ahead. If you want to call me a "bottom feeder" for giving my opinion that is fine too, but I'm afraid you're a few posts too late on that one. You should have been insulting me a handful of days ago along with everyone else.

I have made a valid point with my post above - and that is that the increase isn't solely nor mainly because of fuel prices. Now, if you have a problem with that, you are indeed, the bottom feeder.

If others wish to ignore me, that's fine too but I think I am being decent and polite thus far on this post, and you have attacked me for no reason other than that you have to have a target. If you don't like me coming on here, I'm sorry but I have the right - as you do - to express my opinions as long as I'm not personally attacking anybody.

I was telling "Charbucks" what to expect in my last post - and I stick by it. He does not have the popular belief here, so he will be attacked unfairly for it, as you are unfairly attacking me right now. Apparently you don't agree with our right to free speech, as I do, because you don't want me or anybody else who disagrees with you to have a voice on this site. I believe in those rights, so you go ahead and say what you wish about me.

Have a nice evening!

 
 
 

   
10 things you won't get from corporate media
To help spread the truth this I copied off  gypsymystic@mindsay because it concerns everybody:

 

Submitted by dlindorff on June 11, 2007 - 5:04pm. ImpeachForChange
The fact that most Americans oppose the war in Iraq, and want the president impeached,
is testimony to the native intelligence and common sense of the citizens of this nation

. It sure isn’t thanks to the quality of the news we’re getting here in America! Here are ten things
you don’t know if you just depend on the corporate media for your information:


 1. Most Americans would like to see this president and vice president impeached and removed from office.
 Newsweek magazine published a scientific poll last October showing that 51 percent of us favor impeachment
 (including 29 percent of Republicans!), but the corporate media, which normally haven’t met a poll they won’t
 publish, didn’t publicize this one.

    Now, when the numbers supporting impeachment are surely even higher,
you can’t even pay a polling outfit to ask the question.
    No wonder most people who favor impeachment still think they’re odd ducks.


2. There is a bill, filed in the House of Representatives on April 24 by Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-OH),
calling for the impeachment of Vice President Cheney. Since it was filed, it has gained six co-sponsors,
including a member of the House Democratic leadership, Rep. Janice Shakowsky (D-IL).

   Most major media have ignored this important story completely
. Most Americans also don’t know that the Vermont State Senate voted overwhelmingly
this spring to call on Congress to impeach the president.


3. The president has been declared a felon in federal court.
Yet even after Federal District Judge Anna Diggs Taylor ruled last August that President Bush
and the National Security Agency were committing serial Class A felonies and were violating
both the First and Fourth Amendments by spying on Americans’ communications without
 first obtaining warrants,

  Bush continued ordering the NSA to continue the patently illegal program for at least half a year.
 In reports on the spying program, the corporate media never mention that it has been declared
 a felonious activity by the federal court.


4. Fifteen Democratic state party organizations have passed impeachment resolutions calling on
Democrats in Congress to initiate impeachment proceedings against the president and vice president

. The most recent of these, the Democratic Party of Oklahoma, passed its resolution
 at the party’s annual convention on May 19. Other Democratic Party conventions,
 in states from Nevada and California to Massachusetts and North Carolina,
have passed similar resolutions.

Most have been ignored by the corporate media even in their own states.


5. Bush’s so-called “coalition of the willing” is not so willing and is not really much of a coalition either.

 When’s the last time you’ve heard how many countries are on board with the US in the war and occupation
of Iraq? The reality? Britain, the only significant contributor of combat troops besides the U.S., is pulling out,
 as Italy and Spain did earlier, and many other countries, like Denmark, Lithuania and others, plan to be out
of Iraq by August or at the latest December.

One indication of the seriousness of situation: the Pentagon no longer lists the countries that are members
of the “coalition.” The only mainstream report I’ve seen laying out this collapse in international support for
 Bush’s war was in USA Today last February.


6. The Homeland Security Department last year awarded Halliburton $385 million in a no-bid contract
 to construct prison camps designed to hold tens of thousands of unspecified prisoners in the event of
domestic unrest.

Meanwhile, President Bush has signed a bill altering the insurrection act so that he can declare martial rule
 and order active duty troops to take charge anywhere in the domestic US in the event of “public disorder.”

 No one in the corporate media has reported on these developments or asked
 the White House to explain what it’s all about.


7. There is evidence that Cheney, as CEO of Halliburton, was a patron of the Washington Madam whose
client book of high-class call-girls is causing many in Washington political circles—mostly Republicans it
 appears, who apparently need to pay for their sex—to sweat.

So far no mention of the Cheney angle in the corporate media, though they’ve been
having fun with the broader story of a political sex scandal.

No mention either of how a brave West Point cadet a few weeks ago refused
to shake Cheney’s hand on stage when the vice president was handing out t
his year’s diplomas at the Army’s premiere officer academy.


8. Among the “worst of the worst” of the “evildoers” captured and held as “enemy combatants”
at Guantanamo were children, some of them preteens and kids who were under 15 when captured
and brought to the island of Cuba--

so many in fact that the military had to set up a special facility, called Camp Iguana,
just for adolescent and pre-pubescent “fighters.”

 The corporate media have barely reported on this atrocity (the New York Times ran only one article
mentioning child captives, in June 2005). The only wider coverage of this outrage came recently when
 the government tried to prosecute one such alleged child “terrorist”--Omar Khadr--only to have the
 military judge in charge toss his case out because the government had misclassified him.

 Khadr, we learned, was captured in 2001 in Afghanistan at the ripe age of 15,
 making him one of the older child captives brought to and interrogated at Guantanamo

. Under international law, the U.S. was supposed to treat this and other child soldiers as victims,
not as war criminals.

 Khadr, a Canadian by birth, instead has spent five years doing hard time in US captivity.


 9. Well-researched reports on the rampant theft of both the 2000 and 2004 elections, and on
 Republican plans for theft of the 2008 election, such as Mark Crispin Miller’s Fooled Again,
have gone unmentioned in the corporate media.

 Books on the subject, like Miller’s and like Greg Palast’s best-selling Armed Madhouse,
 have never been reviewed.


10. And of course, there’s my own book. The Case for Impeachment,
despite its having sold over 20,000 copies in hardcover, and despite its having now come out
in a mass-market paperback edition, in both cases printed by a mainstream publisher, St. Martin’s Press,
has not received a single review in the corporate media.

 In this, my co-author Barbara Olshansky and I are not alone. None of the books on the impeachable crimes
of this administration, including one by Nixon-era impeachment panelist and former congresswoman Elizabeth
 Holtzman, and one by Judiciary Chair Rep. John Conyers, has been reviewed by a mainstream media outlet.

 What we’re talking about here is nothing less than a media blackout of important stories and news.

 Thanks to the internet and to the grapevine, and thanks to their basic native intelligence, most Americans
seem to understand that we’re being lied to and cheated.

 What the media blackout of important news does manage to do, however, is keep us all thinking that we
 are in a minority in opposing things like illegal wars, a trampled Constitution, and stolen elections.

 In fact, however, we’re actually the majority.

Once we realize this, maybe we will have a movement,
instead of a just nation of isolated cynics and complainers.

______ DAVE LINDORFF, a Philadelphia-based investigative journalist and columnist,
 is co-author, with Barbara Olshansky, of "The Case for Impeachment: The Legal Argument f
or Removing President George W. Bush from Office"
(St. Martin's Press, 2006, and now out in paperback edition).
His work is available at www.thiscantbehappening.net

This article reprinted in full without permission
 for the purposes of discussion and review,
as permitted by Section 107 of the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976.

 
 
   
 

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Re: welll - Don't feel bad hun. *points* Your my only friend that updates fairly often. I just have too...

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