Saturday, March 28, 2009
UK has list of potential terrorist schoolchildren, as reported by teachers
The first commenter on this article on boingboing says it best: WTF?
Labels:
boingboing,
britain,
surveillance,
terrorism
Obama doesn't actually think listening to citizens' suggestions is a good idea
So much for new thinking and new ideas. From Politico:
In this moment of national economic crisis, the top four questions under the heading of “Financial security” concerned marijuana; on the budget, people voted up questions about marijuana to positions 1-4; marijuana was in the first and third positions under “jobs”; people boosted a plug for legalizing marijuana to No. 2 under “health care reform.” And questions about decriminalizing pot occupied spots 1 and 2 under “green jobs and energy.”I guess we're not going to see any drug / prison policy changes until 2016 (or later).
After taking questions lower on the list, Obama addressed the pot issue head-on, noting the huge number of questions about marijuana legalization and remarking with a chuckle, “I don't know what that says about the online audience."
"The answer is no, I don't think that is a good strategy to grow our economy," he said, as the audience in the room applauded and joined him in a laugh.
Tuesday, March 17, 2009
Obama administration doesn't actually want to take away AIG bonuses
Only now, after the anger over the AIG bonuses has reached a boil, has Obama indicated that the bailout money allocated to AIG executives' bonuses should be retracted. Funny, since it was his administration that, as Glenn Greenwald expertly points out, moved to include those bonus-saving provisions in the bailout legislation in the first place! To add insult to injury, the administration, with the help of others, is trying to pin blame on Sen. Chris Dodd, who initially OPPOSED those same provisions in the law. Score another 'say one thing and do another' point for Obama.
Saturday, March 14, 2009
Obama administration doesn't actually think using state secrets privilege to hide torture practices is a bad idea
Pop quiz: if a president's justice department were to invoke the state secrets privilege from letting evidence be admitted into a case about torturing of potential terrorist suspects that the US government detained (and shipped off to other countries to be tortured, etc. etc.), which president would you associate that with?
a) Bush
b) Obama
c) All of the above
The correct answer is C
Looks like all that talk of transparency was all for naught. Will the American people ever really find out what horrors the government has been perpetrating for the past decade? Not while Obama is in office, it seems.
a) Bush
b) Obama
c) All of the above
The correct answer is C
Looks like all that talk of transparency was all for naught. Will the American people ever really find out what horrors the government has been perpetrating for the past decade? Not while Obama is in office, it seems.
Labels:
darren lenard hutchinson,
obama,
state secrets,
torture
Obama administration doesn't actually believe infinite detention of enemy combatants is a bad idea
In a great post with a great title, Change = Same, Darren Lenard Hutchinson expertly shows that the change in detention policies viz. terrorism between the Bush and Obama administrations is a distinction without a difference. Sad, really, to see that a president that positioned himself as the anti-Bush to reveal himself as the second coming of Bush.
Labels:
darren lenard hutchinson,
obama,
terrorism
Obama administration doesn't actually think the omnipresent, everlasting war on terror is a bad idea
In fact, they quite support it. For the sad truth, one only needs to read Turley's post Top Obama Aides Embrace Bush's War on Terror Rhetoric and Enemy Combatant Policy. Harvard Law Dean Elena Kagan, Obama’s Solicitor General nominee, believes that we are both 1) at war and 2) the whole world is part of our 'battlefield.' Disgusting (and, as we might note, quite antithetical to any kind of 'change').
Obama administration doesn't actually like restraints on presidential power
From Turley:
Literally days after proclaiming that change had come to “signing statements” with a new policy, President Obama has issued a very Bush-like signing statement with his signing of the appropriations bill. The signing statement reserves the right to treat literally dozens of provisions as presumptively unconstitutional.Looks like not much has changed from the past administration to this one...
...
That particular provision is troubling to me as a constitutional matter. The Framers expressly gave Congress the power of the purse as a check and balance on executive authority. The use of appropriations to restrict “foreign entanglements” and “adventures” was well-accepted. This has a true Bush-like quality as a signing statement.
Obama administration doesn't actually like transparency
In a 180 from his professed love of transparency (as embodied in his executive order), Obama is now claiming 'national security' reasons for rejecting a FOIA request to release details about a new secret, international copyright treaty. Looks like this administration's love of secrecy is not so different from the past's. And reading the list of people who are allowed to view this treaty reads like a who's who of Big Media and their lobbyists.
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