Oct. 2nd, 2009

solarbird: (Default)
Nothing below the line in this post is mine; I'm copying it over because most of you won't click through this link for the whole thing, tho' you should, for the complete post.
They Tortured A Man They Knew To Be Innocent, Ctd.

A reader writes:
As a trial attorney with the Department of Justice, I am familiar with the al-Rabiah case (however, to be clear, I am not a trial attorney who worked on the case). My opinions... are not the opinions of the Department. I write for myself and myself alone. ... The conclusion drawn by... my colleagues – some of whom are liberal Democrats, some of whom are conservative, law-and-order Republicans – is, to a person, that the detention and interrogation programs the United States implemented in the months and years following 9/11 is not only a complete abrogation and violation of international law and, in many cases, federal law – it is also fundamentally immoral. We also agree that the al-Rabiah case is by far the most egregious yet to come to light. To repeat: yet to come to light...

...I am surprised you did not highlight... the single most horrifying passage from the Court’s decision. It was the Court’s quotation of something an interrogator said to al-Rabiah during his interrogation...:
"There is nothing against you. But there is no innocent person here. So, you should confess to something so you can be charged and sentenced and serve your sentence and then go back to your family and country, because you will not leave this place innocent."
This was an agent of the United States saying this.
This was not a statement pulled from the transcripts of the Nuremburg trials, nor archival evidence taken from reports smuggled out of one of Stalin’s gulags. This was a statement made by an agent of this government less than 7 years ago to a detainee...

But even worse – far worse – is the fact that the government would nevertheless still seek to convict based on the resulting confession.

To those of us who read that passage and who vowed and make it our vocation to serve and protect the Constitution of the United States, that fact is a gut-punch. For me and my colleagues, it literally took our breath away. It makes one wonder how far down into the abyss we have allowed ourselves to drop. And whether there is the political will to find our way out.

It took my breath away as well. I used to wonder how democracies became tyrannies. I know now. Because good men like Obama do nothing.
solarbird: (music)
Hey, look, I have a stage show tomorrow! Well, tent show. It may and may not be my last market of the year, but it is my last outdoor market show with a stage tent and hopefully audience seating and stuff. I may busk at Woodinville next weekend, if weather permits, and that would be it for the year, because after that, they're all closed! But if it's like Lake City, which is run by the same people, it'll be a lot more organised. Curtain is 11am, and I run for two hours with a short break between sets.

Anyway, it's here, in Magnolia. I've never been there before. Have you? What's it like?

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