When the Bush administration developed a policy wiretaps on Americans known to be working with terrorist groups in other countries. It was treasonous and criminal.
When the Obama administration developed a policy of killing Americans known to be working with terrorist groups in other countries. It is good.
This new liberalism is very confusing.
http://openchannel.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/04/16843014-exclusive-justice-department-memo-reveals-legal-case-for-drone-strikes-on-americans?lite
And don't mention water-boarding. That's cruel and unusual but depriving someone of all their rights is cool.
The websites you're frequenting are doing damage.
Quote from: Townsend on February 05, 2013, 03:53:14 PM
The websites you're frequenting are doing damage.
You're right. I should probably stay away from the front page of http://www.msnbc.com
Wow! It's even on
Al Gore's Al Jazeera http://www.aljazeera.com/news/americas/2013/02/20132517311796860.html
:D
I seldom agree with the ACLU, but I'm in agreement with them on this one. Warrantless wiretaps pales in comparison.
QuoteThe memo said that authorities did not have to possess information regarding a specific imminent attack against the US.
It does require that the capture of terrorism suspects be first deemed unfeasible, and that any such lethal operation by the US targeting a person comply with fundamental law-of-war principles.
"A decision maker determining whether an al-Qaeda operational leader presents an imminent threat of violent attack against the United States must take into account that certain members of al-Qaeda [...] are continually plotting attacks against the United States" and that "al-Qaeda would engage in such attacks regularly to the extent it were able to do so", the document says.
The document also says that a decision maker must take into account that "the US government may not be aware of all al-Qaeda plots as they are developing and thus cannot be confident that none is about to occur; and that [...] the nation may have a limited window of opportunity within which to strike in a manner that both has a high likelihood of success and reduces the probability of American casualties".
With this understanding, the document said, a high-level official could conclude, for example, that an individual poses an imminent threat of violent attack against the US where he is an operational leader of al-Qaeda or an associated force.
'Profoundly disturbing'
The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) said the document is "profoundly disturbing".
"According to the white paper, the government has the authority to carry out targeted killings of US citizens without presenting evidence to a judge before the fact or after, and indeed without even acknowledging to the courts or to the public that the authority has been exercised," Jameel Jaffer, ACLU's deputy legal director, wrote on the organisation's website.
"Without saying so explicitly, the government claims the authority to kill American terrorism suspects in secret."
He termed the limits set out in the memo to be "so vague and elastic that they will be easily manipulated".
Quote from: Gaspar on February 05, 2013, 04:29:58 PM
You're right. I should probably stay away from the front page of http://www.msnbc.com
Wow! It's even on Al Gore's Al Jazeera http://www.aljazeera.com/news/americas/2013/02/20132517311796860.html
Note they don't go with the "it's dem liberals" conspiracy route.
Remember, it's not just the left that's out to get you.
Quote from: Townsend on February 05, 2013, 04:38:23 PM
Note they don't go with the "it's dem liberals" conspiracy route.
Remember, it's not just the left that's out to get you.
No conspiracy. It's just odd to see Holder and Feinstein who both argued so vigorously on the criminality of warrantless wiretaps to so supportive of warrantless extermination. No conspiracy, hypocrisy.
Quote from: Townsend on February 05, 2013, 04:49:42 PM
From the federal government?
Whaaaaaa?
Actually I was just being entertained going back and looking at the posts about wiretapping durring the Bush years. There were some upset folks on this forum. How dare the Bush administration assume they have the right engage in Warrantless Wiretaps.
Boy I'm glad that FOTD is no longer around. He'd be pissed if he learned that the Obama administration has escalated that into assassination.
(http://farm5.staticflickr.com/4077/4924060865_4733fc5194_z.jpg)
Quote from: Gaspar on February 05, 2013, 04:56:08 PM
Actually I was just being entertained going back and looking at the posts about wiretapping durring the Bush years. There were some upset folks on this forum. How dare the Bush administration assume they have the right engage in Warrantless Wiretaps.
Boy I'm glad that FOTD is no longer around. He'd be pissed if he learned that the Obama administration has escalated that into assassination.
Doesn't matter who's in charge. It's always people using power and money to retain their power and money.
I'm confused. I thought Guido, Gaspar, and Conan were all for an outlaw nation. Conan only agrees with the ACLU when it suits his set of political beliefs.
If Obama didn't work at protecting us the GOP would be whining that he was weak. The rules of engagement have changed... as long as the GOP refuses to close Gitmo we will have this type of conflict. Where were the concerns when Bush/Cheney ordered all those renditions that were against our constitution?
I'm just trying to figure out the strategy of all this. It is wrong. POTUS Obama needs to terminate this. But the MIC runs the country and there's your proof...
Quote from: Teatownclown on February 05, 2013, 05:38:58 PM
Conan only agrees with the ACLU when it suits his set of political beliefs.
I also only agree with groups like the ACLU when it suits my political beliefs.
Are you saying you have to completely agree with everything a group says? It is all or nothing?
Quote from: RecycleMichael on February 05, 2013, 06:17:54 PM
I also only agree with groups like the ACLU when it suits my political beliefs.
Are you saying you have to completely agree with everything a group says? It is all or nothing?
NO. I'm saying he blasts their organization %99 of the time. I find it odd when he decides to source them.
Quote from: RecycleMichael on February 05, 2013, 06:17:54 PM
Are you saying you have to completely agree with everything a group says? It is all or nothing?
TTC is thinking of running for Congress. :D
Quote from: Red Arrow on February 05, 2013, 06:46:33 PM
TTC is thinking of running for Congress. :D
I'd do it only if everyone here would be on my cam pain team. We could put me up as the anonymous candidate! I'd wear a paper sack over my head to public appearances, the Unknown Candidate. Guido, Gaspar, and Conan can serve as my closest advisers and Nate would make a great speech writer. Townsend, Heir, and Hoss would make great marketers and could come up with strategy. RM could pick up the debris after our victory. Aqua would be in charge of fluids.
Quote from: Teatownclown on February 05, 2013, 06:45:03 PM
NO. I'm saying he blasts their organization %99 of the time. I find it odd when he decides to source them.
Absolutely untrue. It's about 92% of the time, to be exact.
I honestly don't see what keeping Gitmo open has to do with deciding which Americans the President can and cannot be ordered killed without trial.
"Go kill that Conan fellow, I'm sure he's got ties to Al-Qaeda. I have no evidence, it's just a hunch, so program in a drone to drop one through this roof near 31st & Yale."
Quote from: Conan71 on February 05, 2013, 07:50:44 PM
"Go kill that Conan fellow, I'm sure he's got ties to Al-Qaeda. I have no evidence, it's just a hunch, so program in a drone to drop one through this roof near 31st & Yale."
You may want to set up a decoy address. :D
Quote from: Gaspar on February 05, 2013, 04:29:58 PM
You're right. I should probably stay away from the front page of http://www.msnbc.com
(http://iliketowastemytime.com/sites/default/files/best_animated_gif_nuclear_explosion.gif)
Quote from: guido911 on February 06, 2013, 12:44:54 AM
(http://iliketowastemytime.com/sites/default/files/best_animated_gif_nuclear_explosion.gif)
That's a good example. Your group sees things that aren't there. You sound paranoid.
FOX news, Limbaugh, et al. get you guys going and it makes the rest of us look at you cockeyed.
When you start off with "those Liberals" or "you won't see this in the mainstream media" it takes your credibility away.
Quote from: Gaspar on February 05, 2013, 03:49:41 PM
When the Bush administration developed a policy wiretaps on Americans known to be working with terrorist groups in other countries. It was treasonous and criminal.
When the Obama administration developed a policy of killing Americans known to be working with terrorist groups in other countries. It is good.
You know it is not new to either Bush or Obama. This has been company policy since the beginning of the nation.
And before.
White House defends drone-war killing of Americanshttp://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/obama-memo-justifies-drone-war-killing-americans-164123578--politics.html (http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/obama-memo-justifies-drone-war-killing-americans-164123578--politics.html)
QuoteThe White House on Tuesday defended targeted assassinations of Americans thought to consort overseas with terrorists as "necessary," "ethical" and "wise," as the Obama administration faced fresh questions about its sharply expanded drone war.
"We conduct those strikes because they are necessary to mitigate ongoing actual threats—to stop plots, prevent future attacks and, again, save American lives," White House press secretary Jay Carney told reporters. "These strikes are legal, they are ethical, and they are wise."
Carney's comments came after NBC News published a Justice Department memo that lays out a broad rationale for targeting individual Americans anywhere outside the U.S. for assassination—without oversight from Congress or the courts, and even if the U.S. citizen in question is not actively plotting a specific terrorist attack.
The 16-page document, obtained by NBC News, emerged days before John Brennan, Obama's chief counterterrorism adviser and the foremost architect of America's hugely controversial unmanned aerial vehicle war, goes before the Senate Intelligence Committee in a Thursday hearing on his confirmation as CIA director.
Obama campaigned in 2008 as a fierce critic of George W. Bush's national security policies, notably interrogation practices widely seen as torture. He also left little doubt that he would order unilateral strikes inside another country if he deemed them necessary. In office, he has apparently learned to stop worrying and love executive power—the literal power of life and death over fellow U.S. citizens overseas when he suspects they are consorting with extremists groups that may be targeting America. So, under what circumstances does he have the right to act?
The memo says "an informed, high-level official of the U.S. government" must decide that the target is a "senior operational leader" of al-Qaida or "associated forces"; "poses an imminent threat of violent attack against the United States"; and that an attempt to capture that individual is "infeasible."
"Targeting a member of an enemy force who poses an imminent threat of violent attack to the United States is not unlawful. It is a lawful act of self-defense," the document asserts.
"Imminent threat"? That seems reasonable and is a traditional standard for military action. Except, as NBC investigative reporter Michael Isikoff notes, the memo adds that "the condition that an operational leader present an 'imminent' threat of violent attack against the United States does not require the United States to have clear evidence that a specific attack on U.S. persons and interests will take place in the immediate future."
Instead, that previously mentioned "high-level official" can determine that the potential target was "recently" involved in "activities" posing a threat of an attack and that "there is no evidence suggesting that he has renounced or abandoned such activities."
Isikoff notes the memo does not define "activities" or "recently," leaving that up to the administration to determine on a case-by-case basis.
A reporter asked Carney about the case of Abdulrahman al-Awlaki, the teenage son of Anwar al-Awlaki, an al-Qaida supporter killed by a U.S. drone in Yemen. The boy, 16, was killed in another drone strike about two weeks after his father. Was the son a "senior operational leader" of a terrorist group, a reporter asked. That seemed to stump Carney. "I'm not going to talk about individual operations that may or may not have occurred."
But Obama wages this 21st-century war in a manner "consistent with the Constitution and our laws," while aides review the difficult legal and ethical questions "with great care and deliberation," Carney said.
The memo notes that the president can order a strike against al-Qaida far beyond the battlefield of Afghanistan, and it makes clear that he will not be constrained by national sovereignty. Either a country will give the green light to drone strikes on its territory, or America will strike if that country is "unable or willing" to do so.
This is no surprise. Obama famously said in the 2008 campaign that he would order an attack inside Pakistan to get Osama bin Laden, whether or not Islamabad signed off. He made good on that promise, ordering the raid on bin Laden's compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan, on May 1, 2011, which killed the terrorist leader.
The memo is sure to trigger another round of questions from Congress about the drone war, which has been shrouded in secrecy. And it comes at a time when that campaign is powerfully unpopular overseas, according to a June 2012 Pew Research poll. While 62 percent of Americans approve of the approach, 44 percent of respondents in staunch ally Britain do. And the numbers plummet in countries with large Muslim populations: 6 percent in Egypt, for instance, and 9 percent in NATO ally Turkey.
That's in part the reflection of anger over civilian casualties from such attacks. Obama has grappled with that problem ever since the very first drone strike on his watch, a Jan. 23, 2009, attack that reportedly claimed the life of "an innocent tribal elder" in Pakistan. A May 2012 New York Times report said the administration minimizes civilian casualties by counting "all military-age males in a strike zone as combatants."
The memo drew a withering response from the American Civil Liberties Union.
"This is a profoundly disturbing document, and it's hard to believe that it was produced in a democracy built on a system of checks and balances," said Hina Shamsi, director of the ACLU's National Security Project. "It summarizes in cold legal terms a stunning overreach of executive authority—the claimed power to declare Americans a threat and kill them far from a recognized battlefield and without any judicial involvement before or after the fact."
Quote from: Townsend on February 06, 2013, 08:39:29 AM
That's a good example. Your group sees things that aren't there. You sound paranoid.
FOX news, Limbaugh, et al. get you guys going and it makes the rest of us look at you cockeyed.
When you start off with "those Liberals" or "you won't see this in the mainstream media" it takes your credibility away.
Are you freakin kidding me? We listened to wild, nutjob conspiracy crap about Bush nearly his entire term and only NOW does that crap sound paranoid? Now you'll excuse me while I get back to reading how that third tower fell, then the book espousing Bush invading Iraq as payback for threats against his daddy...
Quote from: guido911 on February 06, 2013, 02:17:36 PM
Are you freakin kidding me? We listened to wild, nutjob conspiracy crap about Bush nearly his entire term and only NOW does that crap sound paranoid? Now you'll excuse me while I get back to reading how that third tower fell, then the book espousing Bush invading Iraq as payback for threats against his daddy...
That's another example of listening to the wrong people. Listening to Limbaugh, FOX news and the others talk about how the crazies are all against you can do further damage.
These talking heads are entertainers. They shouldn't be taken seriously.
Quote from: guido911 on February 06, 2013, 02:17:36 PM
the book espousing Bush invading Iraq as payback for threats against his daddy...
It would be a lot harder to sell that little theory if there had been a rational (and not pre-debunked) reason for that invasion. As it stands, it seems the only people who are really better off for it are the oil companies that can operate there again and those who were on Hussein's smile list.
Quote from: guido911 on February 06, 2013, 02:17:36 PM
Are you freakin kidding me? We listened to wild, nutjob conspiracy crap about Bush nearly his entire term and only NOW does that crap sound paranoid? Now you'll excuse me while I get back to reading how that third tower fell, then the book espousing Bush invading Iraq as payback for threats against his daddy...
And what do you actually think the reason is we invaded Iraq?? Have you settled in on one of the many they advanced and were shown to be known false at the time?
Would love to hear a rational excuse from you on that!