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The Daily Muck
The U.S. detention center at Guantanamo Bay has been opened for since just after the September 11, 2001 attacks yet the military tribunal system there has produced only one conviction (through a plea bargain). Hundreds have been freed after having never been charged with any crime, yet Defense Secretary Robert Gates told a year-end Pentagon news conference that the government has made little progress toward its "vowed goal of closing" the prison. (AFP)
Experts in interrogation assert that “the United States is behind the curve of current best practices, and that videotaping is an essential tool in improving the methods - and results - of questioning terrorism suspects.” According to the specialists, the lack of videotapes in “as many as 100 ‘high-value’ terrorism suspects has prevented” the “capturing” of details that should be “archived, compared, and analyzed in-depth by a range of government experts.” (Boston Globe)
Frances Fragos Townsend, the retiring chief terrorism adviser, said last week that she finds the threat of subpoenas from Congressional investigations "offensive and crippling." During the Clinton Administration, the primary investigative committee in the House of Representatives issued 1,089 subpoenas from 1997 through 2002, 97% of which targeted officials of the Clinton Administration and the Democratic Party; only 11 subpoenas related to allegations of Republican abuses. (Carpetbagger Report)
Some alert media bloggers noted that during last week's press conference by President Bush, he did not call on CNN, making CNN's Ed Henry (who always gets called on) and Helen Thomas (who almost never gets called on by Bush) the only two front-row reporters not to be called on. Recently, CNN has been pressing the White House hard about its deceptiveness on Iranian intelligence and evasiness about its role in destroying the torture tapes. (Media Bistro, Think Progress)
An increasing number of immigrants have filed lawsuits in order to facilitate their stalled U.S. citizenship applications. Issameldin Mohamed of Egypt, for example, sued the “Department of Homeland Security, Secretary Michael Chertoff, FBI Director Robert Mueller and other top government officials as defendants,” so that his name could be cleared in a government background check and his naturalization application could be approved. (USA Today)
Federal law enforcement agencies cannot keep up with the recent boom in mortgage fraud cases. Reports of mortgage fraud have doubled since 2005 and risen eightfold since 2002 but as the FBI conceded, “we have limited resources and have to put them where they do the most good.” In the meantime, career criminals and organized-crime rings are turning to mortgage fraud because of the low risk and high profit. (New York Times)





It will never be closed, and the detainees will never be freed, as long as there is still money in the Treasury and contracts to be given to Bush cronies.
The prisoners are called "terrorist suspects", but they are really just widgets in the great machinery of Fear-Construction.
December 26, 2007 10:50 AM | Reply | Permalink
Posting here as there isn't another place for these various thoughts.
1. I wonder if Obama is pulling ahead partly due to his inclusive message. That may annoy people on the left, but it may bring in independents and possibly even some Republicans, who are so disenchanted with their own slate and have decided to choose a Dem alternative as the best course of action.
2. The Facebook problem just proves that a corporation that does not look out for the good of the people it serves will ultimately be dissed and shunned by consumers.
3. Regarding taping of interrogations. That seems not only good practice in terms of gathering evidence, but it is the best way to ensure that interrogation will not become torture. These records should be preserved in every case and any misuse of power should be prosecuted.
December 26, 2007 11:02 AM | Reply | Permalink
TheraP: regarding Facebook, they were looking to have a spectacular IPO, whenever that was to happen. However, now it's becoming apparent that they couldn't give a rat's ass about the people who made the site what it was in the first place.
I've had Facebook since 2004, and I've been continuously ASTOUNDED at Marc Zuckerberg's brazen disregard for maintaining privacy safeguards, not to mention poor decision making to allow High Schools and non-college students to become users. Be that as it may, every single person who helped make this site what it was deserves alot more respect, and probably a decent sized payout for what we've made it.
But what do we get? Shafted, as usual. What's our information being used for? I bet I haven't gotten jobs because of Facebook in spite of my privacy options. Who's even able to get that information anyway, besides the obvious in Hank Asher?
December 26, 2007 11:19 AM | Reply | Permalink
The australia paper is reporting that after we rendition folks to foreign countries that when they torture for US they are videoing the torture victims and sending us back copies of the tape we should be demanding from the cia a copy of the tapes be given to the press immediately. if we are kidnapping these people off the street to give them to countries who will allow torture are we not as guilty as torturers. further have ya'll noticed a shift in story when kiriakou story first came out he said agents were unknowingly taped so tapes could be taken back to washington for folks to watch who didn't want to travel. Now the story is tapes were kept in vault overseas. my question why make tapes to put in vault. If tapes were brought to washington who would have watched? The President maybe the vice President maybe the national security council maybe cia heads, a few top congress people maybe where are those tapes. Jose only destroyed tapes in vault overseas. Could those tapes brought to washington have been located in Eisenhower building in nsc office day of fire maybe. Do you honestly think top cia spy Jose would dispose of only copy of tapes and not hide a copy. Further do you think KiriaKou's story is untrue that tapes were made for people in washington to see do you think the cia would have sent only copy to whitehouse. Wake up america. Demand those tapes and anymore that show torture.
December 26, 2007 11:25 AM | Reply | Permalink
One of the more obviously false claims the Bush Administration has made every time they have to revise their system of tribunals in the face of legal challenges is that going through regular courts or courts martial would "take too long." It's clear that their real priorities are never admitting error and keeping alive their claims of absolute power.
December 26, 2007 12:16 PM | Reply | Permalink
We should be sending a consistent message via local letter to the Editors, local blogs, etc. that
The United States of America disappears people.
Yep, we have, after languishing behind for so many many years, finally caught up to the most backward of banana republics, not to mention matching HItler step for step, by kidnapping, imprisoning and torturing people off the street...we even did it to British citizens and got away with it !
Quite an achievement for the good ole USA.
It is time to loudly, repeatedly confront the euphemisms the BS regime uses.
It's kidnapping, torturing and disappearing citizens, dammit !!!!!!
December 26, 2007 1:06 PM | Reply | Permalink