Soooo, It seems Obama's first order of business...

CosmoCosmo 9,768 Posts
edited January 2009 in Strut Central
... is this.

  Comments


  • Maybe this country will go back to trial by jury again!

  • yup
    close the kangaroo courts

  • DJ_EnkiDJ_Enki 6,471 Posts
    Maybe this country will go back to trial by jury again!

    Why do you hate America?

  • Maybe this country will go back to trial by jury again!

    Why do you hate America?

    I don't hate America, I love terrorists.

  • GaryGary 3,982 Posts
    Maybe this country will go back to trial by jury again!

    Why do you hate America?

    I don't hate America, I love terrorists.



  • mannybolonemannybolone Los Angeles, CA 15,025 Posts
    Maybe this country will go back to trial by jury again!

    Why do you hate America?

    No, you have it backwards. Now that we have to unilaterally support the President (since, you know, that's what a good patriotic American does), anyone who DISAGREES with Obama's decision hates America.

    So...why do YOU hate America?

  • mannybolonemannybolone Los Angeles, CA 15,025 Posts
    Btw, can someone PLEASE create a graphic that has Obama's face and the slogan "America - love it or leave it?"

    That'd be awesome, thanks.

  • HarveyCanalHarveyCanal "a distraction from my main thesis." 13,234 Posts
    Btw, can someone PLEASE create a graphic that has Obama's face and the slogan "America - loot it or leave it?"

    That'd be awesome, thanks.

  • drewnicedrewnice 5,465 Posts

  • Maybe this country will go back to trial by jury again!

    Please name a single time in american history that an unlawful enemy combatant was tried by jury. Guantanamo is a departure from past practice but not in the way you have been told to think. Under every president preceding dubya it would've been acceptable, and typical, for these taliban dudes to have been lined up against the wall and executed on the spot.

  • Maybe this country will go back to trial by jury again!

    Why do you hate America?

    I don't hate America, I love terrorists.

    Your candor is appreciated but you should add that you're also ignorant of history, international law and a faddish homo who will mindless repeat the conventional wisdom of his bummy peer group.

  • Maybe this country will go back to trial by jury again!

    Please name a single time in american history that an unlawful enemy combatant was tried by jury. Guantanamo is a departure from past practice but not in the way you have been told to think. Under every president preceding dubya it would've been acceptable, and typical, for these taliban dudes to have been lined up against the wall and executed on the spot.

    I'm not on this board to talk politics but all I'll say on this is that while I think a lot of the prisoners in Gitmo deserve life in prison or worse the way we handled the whole thing set back US moral standing around the world. And yes I think moral standing is important. We used to be (deserved or not) the country above reproach when it came to human rights. We aren't any more.

  • With all the secrecy surrounding said detainees how do we as citizens know who deserves to be in Gitmo or not? How can you say who deserves to be in there based on the number of detainees who were released for lack of evidence?

  • LaserWolfLaserWolf Portland Oregon 11,517 Posts
    Under every president preceding dubya it would've been acceptable, and typical, for these taliban dudes to have been lined up against the wall and executed on the spot.

    FALSE. NEVER. IN. USA. HISTORY. WAS. THAT. ACCEPTABLE.

    Your total lack of a moral center is frightening.

  • HarveyCanalHarveyCanal "a distraction from my main thesis." 13,234 Posts
    Under every president preceding dubya it would've been acceptable, and typical, for these taliban dudes to have been lined up against the wall and executed on the spot.

    FALSE. NEVER. IN. USA. HISTORY. WAS. THAT. ACCEPTABLE.


    Yes, because we all remember the trial of Che Guevara.

  • He means morally acceptable

  • UnherdUnherd 1,880 Posts
    Nobody but Harvey could attempt to speak out against state-sponsored murder by going at the guy saying its completely unacceptable, as opposed to say, the dude who's condoning it....

  • well this sucks: Freed by U.S., Saudi Becomes a Qaeda Chief


    The New York Times
    January 23, 2009
    Freed by U.S., Saudi Becomes a Qaeda Chief
    By ROBERT F. WORTH

    BEIRUT, Lebanon ??? The emergence of a former Guant??namo Bay detainee as the deputy leader of Al Qaeda???s Yemeni branch has underscored the potential complications in carrying out the executive order President Obama signed Thursday that the detention center be shut down within a year.

    The militant, Said Ali al-Shihri, is suspected of involvement in a deadly bombing of the United States Embassy in Yemen???s capital, Sana, in September. He was released to Saudi Arabia in 2007 and passed through a Saudi rehabilitation program for former jihadists before resurfacing with Al Qaeda in Yemen.

    His status was announced in an Internet statement by the militant group and was confirmed by an American counterterrorism official.

    ???They???re one and the same guy,??? said the official, who insisted on anonymity because he was discussing an intelligence analysis. ???He returned to Saudi Arabia in 2007, but his movements to Yemen remain unclear.???

    The development came as Republican legislators criticized the plan to close the Guant??namo Bay, Cuba, detention camp in the absence of any measures for dealing with current detainees. But it also helps explain why the new administration wants to move cautiously, taking time to work out a plan to cope with the complications.

    Almost half the camp???s remaining detainees are Yemenis, and efforts to repatriate them depend in part on the creation of a Yemeni rehabilitation program ??? partly financed by the United States ??? similar to the Saudi one. Saudi Arabia has claimed that no graduate of its program has returned to terrorism.

    ???The lesson here is, whoever receives former Guant??namo detainees needs to keep a close eye on them,??? the American official said.

    Although the Pentagon has said that dozens of released Guant??namo detainees have ???returned to the fight,??? its claim is difficult to document, and has been met with skepticism. In any case, few of the former detainees, if any, are thought to have become leaders of a major terrorist organization like Al Qaeda in Yemen, a mostly homegrown group that experts say has been reinforced by foreign fighters.

    Long considered a haven for jihadists, Yemen, a desperately poor country in the southern corner of the Arabian Peninsula, has witnessed a rising number of attacks over the past year. American officials say they suspect that Mr. Shihri may have been involved in the car bombings outside the American Embassy in Sana last September that killed 16 people, including six attackers.

    In the Internet statement, Al Qaeda in Yemen identified its new deputy leader as Abu Sayyaf al-Shihri, saying he returned from Guant??namo to his native Saudi Arabia and then traveled to Yemen ???more than 10 months ago.??? That corresponds roughly to the return of Mr. Shihri, a Saudi who was released from Guant??namo in November 2007. Abu Sayyaf is a nom de guerre, commonly used by jihadists in place of their real name or first name.

    A Saudi security official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said Mr. Shihri had disappeared from his home in Saudi Arabia last year after finishing the rehabilitation program.

    A Yemeni journalist who interviewed Al Qaeda???s leaders in Yemen last year, Abdulela Shaya, confirmed Thursday that the deputy leader was indeed Mr. Shihri, the former Guant??namo detainee. Mr. Shaya, in a phone interview, said Mr. Shihri had described to him his journey from Cuba to Yemen and supplied his Guant??namo detention number, 372. That is the correct number, Pentagon documents show.

    ???It seems certain from all the sources we have that this is the same individual who was released from Guant??namo in 2007,??? said Gregory Johnsen, a terrorism analyst and the editor of a forthcoming book, ???Islam and Insurgency in Yemen.???

    Mr. Shihri, 35, trained in urban warfare tactics at a camp north of Kabul, Afghanistan, according to documents released by the Pentagon as part of his Guant??namo dossier. Two weeks after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, he traveled to Afghanistan via Bahrain and Pakistan, and he later told American investigators that his intention was to do relief work, the documents say. He was wounded in an airstrike and spent a month and a half recovering in a hospital in Pakistan.

    The documents state that Mr. Shihri met with a group of ???extremists??? in Iran and helped them get into Afghanistan. They also say he was accused of trying to arrange the assassination of a writer, in accordance with a fatwa, or religious order, issued by an extremist cleric.

    However, under a heading describing reasons for Mr. Shihri???s possible release from Guant??namo, the documents say he claimed that he traveled to Iran ???to purchase carpets for his store??? in Saudi Arabia. They also say that he denied knowledge of any terrorists or terrorist activities, and that he ???related that if released, he would like to return to Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, wherein he would reunite with his family.???

    ???The detainee stated he would attempt to work at his family???s furniture store if it is still in business,??? the documents say.

    The Yemeni branch of Al Qaeda has carried out a number of terrorist attacks over the past year, culminating in the assault on the American Embassy in Sana on Sept. 16. In that assault, the attackers disguised themselves as Yemeni policemen and detonated two car bombs. The group has also begun releasing sophisticated Internet material, in what appears to be a bid to gain more recruits.

    Yemen began cooperating with the United States on counterterrorism activities in late 2001. But the partnership has been a troubled one, with American officials accusing Yemen of paroling dangerous terrorists, including some who were wanted in the United States. Some high-level terrorism suspects have also mysteriously escaped from Yemeni jails. The disagreements and security lapses have complicated efforts to repatriate the 100 or so Yemenis remaining in Guant??namo.

    Despite some notable Yemeni successes in fighting terrorist groups, Al Qaeda in Yemen appears to be gaining strength.

    ???They are bringing Saudi fighters in, and they want to start to use Yemen as a base for attacks throughout region, including Saudi Arabia and the Horn of Africa,??? said Mr. Johnsen, an expert on Al Qaeda in Yemen.

    Eric Schmitt contributed reporting from Washington; Khalid al-Hammadi from Sana, Yemen; and Muhammad al-Milfy from Beirut.

  • GaryGary 3,982 Posts
    rehabilitation program for former jihadists



    "My name is Mohammed, and, uh, I'm a recovering Jihadist....Its been 34 days since my last car bombing...."

  • HarveyCanalHarveyCanal "a distraction from my main thesis." 13,234 Posts
    Nobody but Harvey could attempt to speak out against state-sponsored murder by going at the guy saying its completely unacceptable, as opposed to say, the dude who's condoning it....

    My point was that it has always been perfectly acceptable by our society at large. A more perfect example would be the Branch Davidians, where our society even condones the slaughter of innocent children...trial be damned.

  • you forgot Ruby Ridge.

  • Under every president preceding dubya it would've been acceptable, and typical, for these taliban dudes to have been lined up against the wall and executed on the spot.

    FALSE. NEVER. IN. USA. HISTORY. WAS. THAT. ACCEPTABLE.

    Your total lack of a moral center is frightening.

    The summary execution of unlawful enemy combatants is perfectly within the scope of international law

  • LaserWolfLaserWolf Portland Oregon 11,517 Posts
    Under every president preceding dubya it would've been acceptable, and typical, for these taliban dudes to have been lined up against the wall and executed on the spot.

    FALSE. NEVER. IN. USA. HISTORY. WAS. THAT. ACCEPTABLE.

    Your total lack of a moral center is frightening.

    The summary execution of unlawful enemy combatants is perfectly within the scope of international law

    Are you arguing for One World Government?

    Do you think the USA should be governed by international law?

    If the answer is yes, then let the war crimes trials begin.

    Please to show source for the legality of summary execution of unlawful enemy combatants in international law. I need to be educated.

  • LaserWolfLaserWolf Portland Oregon 11,517 Posts
    Nobody but Harvey could attempt to speak out against state-sponsored murder by going at the guy saying its completely unacceptable, as opposed to say, the dude who's condoning it....

    My point was that it has always been perfectly acceptable by our society at large. A more perfect example would be the Branch Davidians, where our society even condones the slaughter of innocent children...trial be damned.

    You must have been very young when the Branch Dividian thing went down. No one condoned the slaughter of innocent children. Who was at greatest fault for their death has been hotly debated.

    The Branch Dividian thing has always been hard for me to understand.

    It was my understanding that US Marshals went to the compound to serve a court summons and were shot at.

    In the normal course of events I would have expected most people to side with the government agents and against those who would shot at law enforcement.

    But the opposite happened with people siding with the Branch Dividian's right to shoot government agents.

    Ruby Ridge same story.

    Any way, I don't remember anyone from the Bush 41 or the Clinton administration certainly not Janet Reno, or the press, condoning the slaughter of innocent children.

    If you want to say that the government killed those children, or that no one was held responsible, I wont argue.

    But of course that is not what you want to say, you want to say that the US government is controlled by evil masons who are using ancient wii technology to control our minds.
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