by Pops » Sun 02 Sep 2012, 20:26:48
Thanks for the link cloud.
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I know it's trendy among some to brag about their cynicism and worldliness and moral rectitude and how they aren't really republicans. I do believe it is my obligation to decide between "two evils".
So, just so we have our evils straight - one more time,
the AUMF statute of indefinite detention was signed by Bush and established precedent affirmed by the SCOTUS 10 years before Obama signed the NDAA. As for what Obama did do, the
the Senate committee report stated:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')s requested by the Administration, the new bill would clarify that the section providing detention authority does not expand the existing authority to detain under the Authorization for Use of Military Force Force
Yet not one of you guys will condemn Bush for "gutting the constitution", rebut that fact, or even acknowledge it.
Oh, and I certainly can't vote for Romney on this issue because he has flat out said he not only would have voted for the NDAA but that US citizens on US soil who join AQ are "not entitled to due process". That is the
direct quote. That is way beyond what even the Bush AUMF laid out.
So again, I know the idea that Obama gutted the constitution fits into the right's preferred stereotype of Obama, but the fact is that distinction goes to Bush and Romney has flatly stated he would go beyond even Bush. It could be an Etch a Sketch comment but who knows? But I also know that no matter what factual evidence I post up here you 3 or 4 guys will not change your minds because it isn't the facts that you are concerned with it's clinging to the stereotype.
The legitimate object of government, is to do for a community of people, whatever they need to have done, but can not do, at all, or can not, so well do, for themselves -- in their separate, and individual capacities.
-- Abraham Lincoln, Fragment on Government (July 1, 1854)
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Pops
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by Pops » Mon 03 Sep 2012, 08:32:56
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Cloud9', 'B')ush was a POS, but Obama signed the bill. He could have sent it back and forced a two thirds vote. He did not.
You're right he could have.
The original vote in the house was like 3 to1 and the Senate was 80-something yeas. I wish he had but it would have been just for show and would have changed nothing because the AUMF is still in place.
Pretty good rant TC, especially the bit about O being way left, I'm only a little left and he's way right of me. The one on topic line re Os "insistence on provisions within the NDAA to allow the murder and detention of U.S. citizens," has been disproven in this thread. I don't know about the other election fraud, I kind of doubt there is much required outside of gerrymandering and closed primaries that cause us to focus on the most extreme candidates.
The legitimate object of government, is to do for a community of people, whatever they need to have done, but can not do, at all, or can not, so well do, for themselves -- in their separate, and individual capacities.
-- Abraham Lincoln, Fragment on Government (July 1, 1854)
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by The_Toecutter » Mon 03 Sep 2012, 11:23:41
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Pops', 'P')retty good rant TC, especially the bit about O being way left, I'm only a little left and he's way right of me. The one on topic line re Os "insistence on provisions within the NDAA to allow the murder and detention of U.S. citizens," has been disproven in this thread.
Bush having approved similar measures in the past with a compliant Supreme Court does not disprove the fact that the Obama Whitehouse later demanded similar provisions in the NDAA, merely that he wasn't the first. In fact, Senator Carl Levin, Democrat, claims that Obama demanded and insisted upon Provision 1021 himself.
That tyrant is not even worth defending, like Bush.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') don't know about the other election fraud, I kind of doubt there is much required outside of gerrymandering and closed primaries that cause us to focus on the most extreme candidates.
You could go to blackboxvoting.org and other sites and find out a small piece of how truly rampant the problem is. Millions of votes in each presidential election are not counted each and every time. It's nothing short of a circuis with the winners largely pre-determined by a subset our our power elite. Currently, the power elite can live with either Obama or Romney; they'll both do their bidding.
The unnecessary felling of a tree, perhaps the old growth of centuries, seems to me a crime little short of murder. ~Thomas Jefferson
by The_Toecutter » Mon 03 Sep 2012, 15:32:23
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Pops', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('The_Toecutter', 'O')bama Whitehouse later demanded similar provisions in the NDAA, merely that he wasn't the first.
Read the thread:
16-counties-defy-obama-ndaa-indefinite-detention-t66573-15.html#p1127640 Actually, that thread fails to dispel anything I have said. I implicate both Bush AND Obama for this provision; Obama chose to cooperate with Congress in codifying it into law for a second time by signing it, and insisted on Congress including that unlawful Section. That pdf document you posted fails to disprove that. Further, witness the testimony of Carl Levin in the link below if you don't believe me about Obama including that provision:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4DNDHbT44cY$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'C')ARL LEVIN: I'm wondering whether The Senator is familiar with the fact that the language which precluded the application of Section 1031 to American Citizens was in the bill that we originally approved in the Armed Services Committee and the administration asked us to remove the language which says that U.S. citizens and lawful residents would not be subject to this Section. is the Senator familiar with the fact that it was the Administration that asked us to remove the vary language which we had in the bill, which passed the committee, and that we removed at it the request of the Administration that would have said the act of this determination would not apply to U.S. citizens and lawful residents. I'm just wondering, is the Senator familiar with the fact that it was this administration which asked us to remove the vary language the absence of which is now objected to by the Senator from Illinois?
King George the Third(also referred to as Bush III). Maybe it really will be 1776 all over again... The death of the 1st, 2nd, 4th, 5th, 6th, 8th, 9th, and 10th amendments and the militarized, violent treatment of nonviolent protestors seeking to reverse this by those very same individuals entrusted by those same American people to "protect and serve" them are the canary in the coal mine, and Americans will either do something, or they wont. Voting for someone wearing magic Mormon underwear will not ever constitute any actual change, unlike what many on the extreme right think, and voting for the incumbent means more "change you can believe in", however great it worked out with the reduced liberties, continued domestic surveillance, increased persecution of whistle-blowers, continued bailouts and corporate welfare, and continuance of the endless wars and all of that which Americans voted for Obama on the expectation that he would correct the mistakes of the Bush Administration; many on the left will vote for Obama anyhow, deluded enough to think that he actually represents them. If we don't get 1776, we will get WWIII at this rate. Isreal demands the latter and can profit handsomely from both and our "representatives" are willing to oblige them on our behalf against our will and desires to the detriment of our national security and sovoreignty.
We now have 2 billion hollow point bullets waiting for use and well in excess of 100 guarded camps waiting for occupants, supposedly to house a mass influx of illegal immigrants(in spite of many of said camps being located well away from any borders where any illegals are a problem), but could function just as well at holding U.S. citizens for nonviolent acts of protest or civil disobedience; they are waiting to be used on
someone, and this government certainly doesn't seem too enthusiastic to stop illegal immigration, as evidenced by the state department letting the transnationals employ them illegally within U.S. borders at slave wages, and is rendering our identities easily able to be purchased by illegals wishing to immigrate here with provisions such as Real ID and those invasive requirements pushed by the AAMVA and companies like L1 Identity Solutions for their own financial benefit. The rampant biometric and personal information collection can easily be facilitated to the purpose of hunting down those, as people did in the Civil War, World Wars and in Vietnam, who avoid conscription or tax payments, persecuting their associates who aid or support them, and to prevent people from passing the borders through tracking people without having to use any GPS technology whatsoever to do it(especially thanks to advances in UAVs that can do facial recognition from 750-1000 feet). It renders us easy targets of imprisonment for the benefit of corporate, for-profit prisons owned by these very same "leaders" for the slightest law broken, and there are enough laws in the U.S. to get anyone locked up, never mind that evidence is frequently fabricated by crooked police departments and DAs and judges receive kickbacks from groups like the CCA for each person locked up while jurors are screened to assure that they will not be capable of ever invoking nullification.
The legal framework to allow all of this has been set up; that part is *not* tin and it is a clear violation of our most fundamental rights. What are we going to do about it?
The courts either side with the federal government or are ignored outright(such as the case of the TSA refusing to comply with answering questions about the airport body scanners, or Katherine Forrest's questions about whether the NDAA has been used going unanswered, the NSA, DHS, and other gestapo organizations refusing to comply with subpoenas and FOIA requests with impunity), and juries are denied their most basic rights as jurors and intentionally filled with incompetents looking for a guilty verdict on anything and everything. The Federal Courts have a greater than 95% conviction rate, yet are impotent when it comes to prosecuting Goldman Sachs or individuals like John Corzine for their crimes that have had real and noticable effects upon tens of millions of Americans. The law enforcement community is certainly not going to help us, as they use force against entire neighborhoods for non-violent protest, as has happened in Anaheim, California weeks ago. Some people worry about anarchy, without realizing there really is no rule of law within the U.S. anymore; many consider Kafkaesque kangaroo courts corrupted by money with the verdict largely a foregone conclusion as an adequate substitute, not yet cognizant of the fact that this is going on. The courts and police are the only government institutions a majority of Americans still trust, and even that trust is fading rapidly.
Meanwhile, Americans who keep more than a weeks worth of food, who own firearms, who are critical of the Federal Reserve, returning Veterans of the armed Services, are environmentalists of any sort, who are critical about the political influence of Wall Street, who own gold and silver, have favorable views towards Ron Paul, who pay for goods and services with cash, who are missing limbs and fingers, who refuse biometric IDs, are all potential "terror" suspects now. They encompass the left, right, and center. Today. With the "liberal" Obama administration in charge, who at one time had a "liberal" Democratic Congress with close to a super-majority of Democrats in charge that both intentionally let Bush's war crimes go unprosecuted, as proven by Wikileaks, which this government has attempted to repeatedly censor.
This is not tin, folks. It CAN happen here. With but a few clicks of a mouse and a few keystrokes, each and every one of the claims I have made can be referenced and verified. No wonder our government is so adamant about "securing" the internet. China, a nation by some measures more free than us, by others less free, does it.
The NDAA will be used in time and may have been used already; otherwise there was no point in adding this provision. YOU and ME and ANYONE residing in U.S. borders are potential targets. Our own "representative" government has had individual members which have served it say as much.
Vote for Obama, if it makes you feel all good inside; you believe in his "change." Vote for Romney, if you agree that he is the one who should be granted this type of authority instead of Obama, who has expressed far more enthusiasm than Obama with regard to actually using it. Vote, thinking your vote is actually counted, if it makes you feel better. The fix is already in, and the "choice" a matter of aesthetics.
I have little doubt that certain people will lash out against the society that has disenfranchised the majority of its constituents. What else can be expected at this point other than an irreversible slide into totalitarianism?
This NDAA provision is a type of legislation that is authoritarian in the extreme. NONE of its supporters can be "moderates" or "centrists" by any sense of the word due to what these labels actually mean. They are a clear majority of our congress, courts, state governments, and law enforcement.
Left or Right matters not. Obama is a tyrant, Pops. So is Romney, Planted Agent. A tyrant is a tyrant is a tyrant is a tryant.
All of this bickering over which one is favorable is completely pointless, if you actually value liberty. There are communist countries more free than the United States.
The unnecessary felling of a tree, perhaps the old growth of centuries, seems to me a crime little short of murder. ~Thomas Jefferson