Fred[OZ75]
Jihad Jeep Driver
+19|7182|Perth, Western Australia

(T)eflon(S)hadow wrote:

do you want to simply re-read my statement I posted, or shall I re-post it?
I don't agree with your off topic argument. If Russia acted upon your described argument, the citizens would not be "non-combatants', they would be hostages, completely covered by the Deceleration of Independence, the US Constitution and the Third Geneva Conventions. You argument is still off topic and mute. Not to mention the US Armed Forces can and would fully respond as soon as, they have been a given the green light to do something about it.
"non-combatants"... WTF is that but an US administrations excuse no to follow international or US law?

People are either a POW or criminals under international law (well even US law), this "non-combatant" BS is just an excuse to hold people and tortour them for information.
d4rkst4r
biggie smalls
+72|6875|Ontario, Canada

Kmarion wrote:

PureFodder wrote:

It's nice to see the US begin to catch up with the rest of the civillised world.
Plz.. The United States has done more for fascism in two hundred years than the rest of the world has done in two thousand. Try to think beyond this little fart we call our lifetime on a more historically accurate scale.
fixed.
"you know life is what we make it, and a chance is like a picture, it'd be nice if you just take it"
Lotta_Drool
Spit
+350|6605|Ireland

JahManRed wrote:

I am on topic. We are debating Gito. I am talking about Gito. Explain to me why I am off topic? Or is anything you don't agree with off topic?

Ok so we have established that according to you it is only ok for the USA to practice rendition but if anyother country does it, its an act of war.

Thanks you answered my question.

Now can you explain to me why the USA is the only country you feel should be allowed to do this?
All countries can do this and many have at one time or another.  During war people are taken prisoner, go figure.  The problem with the people in Gitmo is that the US refuses just to line them up and shoot them when they are done gathering info. from them, are unwilling to release the terrorist, and were unwilling to bring them into the US justice system because they were caught by the military which is not a part of law enforcement and of course the military doesn't build civil cases against the enemy or seek arrest warrents.

This whole thing is stupid and bush created it by letting the media have access to our military during a time of war.  They should have been tortured properly (right when they were captured) to get the info from them quickly and then executed.  I miss the old days.

It is fun to listen to you liberals cry about them with such despair.  booo fucking hooo the US caught some people and peed on their bibles and made them eat a pork chop whhhhaaaaaaaaaa!
(T)eflon(S)hadow
R.I.P. Neda
+456|7251|Grapevine, TX

Fred[OZ75] wrote:

(T)eflon(S)hadow wrote:

do you want to simply re-read my statement I posted, or shall I re-post it?
I don't agree with your off topic argument. If Russia acted upon your described argument, the citizens would not be "non-combatants', they would be hostages, completely covered by the Deceleration of Independence, the US Constitution and the Third Geneva Conventions. You argument is still off topic and mute. Not to mention the US Armed Forces can and would fully respond as soon as, they have been a given the green light to do something about it.
"non-combatants"... WTF is that but an US administrations excuse no to follow international or US law?

People are either a POW or criminals under international law (well even US law), this "non-combatant" BS is just an excuse to hold people and tortour them for information.
This is serious debate and talk

"non-combatants" as defined by the Third Geneva Conventions, not GWB or the US Administration.
FEOS
Bellicose Yankee Air Pirate
+1,182|6833|'Murka

Dilbert_X wrote:

And our system is on its way to correct that. The human right problem you decry involves (in relative terms) a handful of people. Compared to the 300+ million population of the US. Perspective.
In the same way only a small number of Germans were actually in the SS, so gassing the jews was OK and can now be forgotten?
Is that the kind of perspective you're talking about?

Or maybe, the twin towers attacks were perpetrated by a true handful of people, no need to demonise and wage war against the whole arab world?
Good try, but not at all what I was saying and you know it.

I'm saying there are 300+ million citizens in the US who are living by just about any standard pretty well. There are a handful of non-US citizens being held at Gitmo under questionable circumstances. That is not at all close to saying only a few Germans were in the SS so it's OK they killed millions of Jews. You're comparing apples and corkscrews.
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein

Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
FEOS
Bellicose Yankee Air Pirate
+1,182|6833|'Murka

Braddock wrote:

DBBrinson1 wrote:

Braddock wrote:


You could do that. You don't seem overly concerned with staying on moral high ground so I don't see why not.
Actually the US has so what are you complaing about?
Just because you're not as bad as the enemy doesn't mean you're not bad. Invading sovereign countries who pose no threat to domestic security, carpet bombing Somalian villages, snatching people covertly without following legal protocol, locking people up indefinitely and using Internationally condemned rendition (torture) techniques shows that the US are quite prepared to play the 'baddie' in this ludicrous war on 'terror'.
Just because you think Iraq didn't pose a threat to US interests (note I didn't say "domestic security") doesn't mean there wasn't a threat. You don't get to make that call. Thankfully.

What Somalian villages have been "carpet bombed"?

The issue with torture has been resolved, both in the military and in the intelligence services.
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein

Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
Ajax_the_Great1
Dropped on request
+206|7069

d4rkst4r wrote:

Kmarion wrote:

PureFodder wrote:

It's nice to see the US begin to catch up with the rest of the civillised world.
Plz.. The United States has done more for fascism in two hundred years than the rest of the world has done in two thousand. Try to think beyond this little fart we call our lifetime on a more historically accurate scale.
fixed.
My government has pretty much entirely stayed out of my life besides taxes and common sense laws.

Oh wait, I guess I was pulled over for speeding once but he let me off with a warning. Facist pig!
Kmar
Truth is my Bitch
+5,695|7023|132 and Bush

d4rkst4r wrote:

Kmarion wrote:

PureFodder wrote:

It's nice to see the US begin to catch up with the rest of the civillised world.
Plz.. The United States has done more for fascism in two hundred years than the rest of the world has done in two thousand. Try to think beyond this little fart we call our lifetime on a more historically accurate scale.
fixed.
If you honestly believe that you have no understanding of history at all.

PureFodder wrote:

Lotta_Drool wrote:

PureFodder wrote:

Go look up US human rights abuses and compare it to Western Europe. The US is still playing catchup.

Freedoms like abolition of slavery, where the US trailed Europe by 30 years, civil rights again trailed behind Europe, Rights of homosexuals, still not caught up. Worker rights, consistently trailed decades behind Europe. In fact, I can only think of freedom of speech where the US actually lead the world.

The historically accurate scale appears to show the US playing a lot of catch-up rather than leading the way.
Yeah, that whole Nazism thing didn't violate any human rights and Communism gave everyone the equality they longed for.

Be grateful for the bubble of blissful ignorance you live in, because reality sometimes chaffs.
Huge numbers of Europeans died trying to stop the Nazis. Communism came out of the Soviet Union not Europe. At the most you can dump these things on Germany. Italy and Greece can't be mocked by Americans as the US was heavlily supporting the facism there.
After WWII most of Europe gave up on previous warmongering, while the US busied itself ovethrowing South American democracies and replacing them with brutal mass murdering dictatorships and trying to kill most of everyone in Indochina. Again, Europe has NOT got a lovely past The British Empire was horribly barbaric, but the horrible bits are futher in the past than Americas.

Again, my statement that the US is playing catch-up is historically accurate.
Right, and the French didn't mirror our revolution while the old world powers watched? Are you really so naive as to think Europe didn't help establish these same dictators? When you get over your insatiable desire to bash US foreign policy you might want to take a look at your own.
Xbone Stormsurgezz
Vax
Member
+42|6274|Flyover country

FEOS wrote:

Braddock wrote:

DBBrinson1 wrote:


Actually the US has so what are you complaing about?
Just because you're not as bad as the enemy doesn't mean you're not bad. Invading sovereign countries who pose no threat to domestic security, carpet bombing Somalian villages, snatching people covertly without following legal protocol, locking people up indefinitely and using Internationally condemned rendition (torture) techniques shows that the US are quite prepared to play the 'baddie' in this ludicrous war on 'terror'.
Just because you think Iraq didn't pose a threat to US interests (note I didn't say "domestic security") doesn't mean there wasn't a threat. You don't get to make that call. Thankfully.

What Somalian villages have been "carpet bombed"?

The issue with torture has been resolved, both in the military and in the intelligence services.
I was going to respond to that as well, but I just closed the window. Pretty clear when somebody is just talking outta their ass.

I too was curious about these Somalian Villages that we "carpet bombed" 

Oh and "rendition" is not referring to torture.
ZombieVampire!
The Gecko
+69|6249

Kmarion wrote:

PureFodder wrote:

It's nice to see the US begin to catch up with the rest of the civillised world.
Plz.. The United States has done more for freedom in two hundred years than the rest of the world has done in two thousand. Try to think beyond this little fart we call our lifetime on a more historically accurate scale.
Such as?
Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,822|6528|eXtreme to the maX
I too was curious about these Somalian Villages that we "carpet bombed"
I guess he means the ones flattened by AC130s to get one or two suspected AQ.
The issue with torture has been resolved, both in the military and in the intelligence services.
Yeah funny, the US President can have anyone tortured if he wants to.
Fuck Israel
PureFodder
Member
+225|6707

Kmarion wrote:

PureFodder wrote:

Lotta_Drool wrote:

Yeah, that whole Nazism thing didn't violate any human rights and Communism gave everyone the equality they longed for.

Be grateful for the bubble of blissful ignorance you live in, because reality sometimes chaffs.
Huge numbers of Europeans died trying to stop the Nazis. Communism came out of the Soviet Union not Europe. At the most you can dump these things on Germany. Italy and Greece can't be mocked by Americans as the US was heavlily supporting the facism there.
After WWII most of Europe gave up on previous warmongering, while the US busied itself ovethrowing South American democracies and replacing them with brutal mass murdering dictatorships and trying to kill most of everyone in Indochina. Again, Europe has NOT got a lovely past The British Empire was horribly barbaric, but the horrible bits are futher in the past than Americas.

Again, my statement that the US is playing catch-up is historically accurate.
Right, and the French didn't mirror our revolution while the old world powers watched? Are you really so naive as to think Europe didn't help establish these same dictators? When you get over your insatiable desire to bash US foreign policy you might want to take a look at your own.
For starters, the US War of Independence was carried out by European settlers, hence it was as much our idea as yours. We share responsability for that one. The French didn't mirror your revolution, they went WAY beyond it. Abolished slavery, introduced things like welfare and the social contract, universal education etc.

Europe certainly did establish horrible dictators all over the place and invaded places, killed vast numbers of people etc. but have largely given up on this since WWII (Britain being the middle ground between Eruope and the US). The US has not. My point was that Europe generally stopped doing these things further in the past than the US did. Again, this is shown by the historical record. Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Guatemala, Haiti, Nicaragua, Panama etc. These all occured AFTER Europe largely stopped doing this. Your link is UK arms deals to Iraq, which the US also carried out, as well as overwhelming military support for the brutal atrocities carried out by Turkey in the 90s, Colombia, Indonesia amongst others. At the very best you can argue that the US does the same things as Europe but on a larger scale. The Dutch bloke is just one bloke and has been caught an tried for what he did showing that the society is agaisnt his action. The US government hasn't been tried for what they've been doing, showing the difference between these two cases.

Again, the historical record shows that the US has been playing catch-up with Europe.
Bertster7
Confused Pothead
+1,101|7003|SE London

FEOS wrote:

But the first republic in Europe based itself on the new US model.
Really?

I thought the first major European republic (the Dutch Republic) began almost 200 years before the declaration of independence, which would seem to demolish that argument. The fact that the political writings that were essentially the basis for the US model came almost entirely from European sources doesn't do the argument much good either - John Locke being the most obvious example.

Kmarion wrote:

Our founding fathers were certainly pioneers of freedom but their ancestors had a little European experience when it came to human rights. .. say like the Magna Carta .
Absolutely right. The founding fathers were certainly pioneers, but the ideals they were putting into practice were well established ones predominantly dreamt up by European philosophers and political thinkers. Though that shouldn't detract from the fact that they realised these ideals by establishing a state built upon them. Kudos to them for that.

Kmarion wrote:

We dumped slavery in less than 100 years.. how about you my lord? How long was it that you were ruled by "descendants of god".
No time at all, certainly in post-Christian Europe, though I see what you're getting at. There is a marked difference between claiming to be a descendant of God and claiming to be chosen or appointed by God - which is the situation we had here. You may argue the difference is subtle, but I'm sure many would disagree.

In any case, the point remains, that the US when the US was founded it had a modern and enlightened outlook. It is a shame that from these exceedingly hopeful beginnings, from the perspective of liberty, social equality and justice, the US has not kept pace with developments in Europe - though have exceeded Europe's advances in many other areas. An example is slavery which was abolished in Europe decades before in the US, despite the more enlightened founding principles there.

The argument that:

Kmarion wrote:

The United States has done more for freedom in two hundred years than the rest of the world has done in two thousand.
on a national scale concerning personal liberty, is non-existent.

(On an international scale it could certainly be argued that the role of the US in WWII protected the freedoms of many people wolrdwide, though there are counter arguments to this and it is not something the US can take sole credit for. The Cold War is an even more dubious example, since the US could plausibly be held accountable for starting it, despite the peacemaking efforts of Churchill in his final years as Prime Minister after Atlee's government had transformed Britain. Regardless of that, personal rights and liberties are what freedom is all about.)

Freedom stems from rights and true freedom stems from effectively enforced rights. This may seem to be counter-intuitive, since enforcement of any kind is clearly an infringement upon someones freedoms. Yet overall the freedoms of the masses must outweigh the freedoms of the individual so that all of society is free to more or less the same extent, it is here that the rights of the individual come into play and those rights are protected by laws. Laws are imposed by a governing body, typically a government. However the individual must also have rights that protect them from the governing body and ensure that the laws of the land are enforced in a fair and just fashion. It is these rights and freedoms that must be examined in cases such as these and the essence of US individual rights and liberties have been copied directly from English common law. I refer you to the text of the Supreme Court ruling in this case regarding the application of Habeus Corpus (also an English instigated personal freedom taken directly from the Magna Carta):

Ruling of the US Supreme Court on BOUMEDIENE ET AL. v. BUSH, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES, ET AL. wrote:

The common-law writ was codified by the Habeas Corpus Act of 1679, which “stood alongside Magna Charta and the English Bill of Rights of 1689 as a towering common law lighthouse of liberty—a beacon by which framing lawyers in America consciously steered their course.
Much of the Supreme Court ruling references incidents of precedent in England regarding the enforcement of these rights. An example of how seriously this right has impacted on English culture and how seriously it is taken can again be found within the text of the Supreme Court ruling:

Ruling of the US Supreme Court on BOUMEDIENE ET AL. v. BUSH, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES, ET AL. wrote:

A notable example from this period was Darnel’s Case, 3 How. St. Tr. 1 (K. B. 1627). The events giving rise to the case began when, in a display of the Stuart penchant for authoritarian excess, Charles I demanded that Darnel and at least four others lend him money. Upon their refusal,they were imprisoned. The prisoners sought a writ of habeas corpus; and the King filed a return in the form of a warrant signed by the Attorney General. Ibid. The court held this was a sufficient answer and justified the subjects’ continued imprisonment. Id., at 59.
There was an immediate outcry of protest. The House of Commons promptly passed the Petition of Right, 3 Car. 1,ch. 1 (1627), 5 Statutes of the Realm 23, 24 (reprint 1963),which condemned executive “imprison[ment] without any cause” shown, and declared that “no freeman in any such manner as is before mencioned [shall] be imprisoned or deteined.” Yet a full legislative response was long delayed.
The King soon began to abuse his authority again,and Parliament was dissolved.
These events led to (indirectly, but the dissolution of Parliament over this issue was a key factor - the new Parliament created afterwards so the King could raise money included Oliver Cromwell and drew up the Petition of Right upon its inception) the English civil war after which Charles I was executed and England became a Republic (The Commonwealth of England) in 1649. We didn't like the Republic much and so reintroduced the Monarchy in 1660. The magnitude of the events surrounding this demonstrates well how important these personal freedoms were taken to be, even more than three centuries ago - the implications of which should bear strongly upon Bush.

Last edited by Bertster7 (2008-06-14 04:55:24)

JahManRed
wank
+646|7050|IRELAND

(T)eflon(S)hadow wrote:

do you want to simply re-read my statement I posted, or shall I re-post it?
I don't agree with your off topic argument. If Russia acted upon your described argument, the citizens would not be "non-combatants', they would be hostages, completely covered by the Deceleration of Independence, the US Constitution and the Third Geneva Conventions. You argument is still off topic and mute. Not to mention the US Armed Forces can and would fully respond as soon as, they have been a given the green light to do something about it.
The taking of hostages is prohibited by international humanitarian law (Article 34, Fourth Convention ; Article 3 common to the Geneva Conventions ; Article 75(2c), Additional Protocol I ; and Article 4(2c), Additional Protocol II).

Article 3
In the case of armed conflict not of an international character occurring in the territory of one of the High Contracting Parties, each Party to the conflict shall be bound to apply, as a minimum, the following provisions:

1. Persons taking no active part in the hostilities, including members of armed forces who have laid down their arms and those placed hors de combat by sickness, wounds, detention, or any other cause, shall in all circumstances be treated humanely, without any adverse distinction founded on race, colour, religion or faith, sex, birth or wealth, or any other similar criteria.

Id say being abducted from your bed and put in a military jail with no charges for 5 years puts you in the above category.
To this end, the following acts are and shall remain prohibited at any time and in any place whatsoever with respect to the above-mentioned persons:

(a) Violence to life and person, in particular murder of all kinds, mutilation, cruel treatment and torture;

Water boarding.
(b) Taking of hostages;
Abducting Innocent people from outside your own borders.
(c) Outrages upon personal dignity, in particular humiliating and degrading treatment;
Abu Ghraib
(d) The passing of sentences and the carrying out of executions without previous judgment pronounced by a regularly constituted court, affording all the judicial guarantees which are recognized as indispensable by civilized peoples
Check.

The USA isn't the only country in the world to have terrorist problems. I used Russia as an example and they do have a terrorist problem. Maybe I should have worded my question to you like this: If Russia abducted an American citizen sighting him as a Non Combatant suspected terrorist this is legitimate

(T)eflon(S)hadow wrote:

These detainees' are captured "non-combatants".  My God have mercy on them, but they do not rate or deserve the US Constructional Rights, as I do, a US citizen and former member of the US Armed Forces. You can bitch and express your opinion till the server runs out of drive space, I dont care. This is complete fucking bullshit.
I would argue that if these detainees are picked out by a US citizen, detained by a US citizen and flown across the world by US citizens, tortured by US citizens and questioned by US citizens they they are entitled to the same constitutional rights. They become your responsibility as soon as they are lifted and whisked off. You can't use all your laws to bring evidence and justify operating outside your own boarders (often against the Host nations wishes) and then no afford these people the same rights laid out in the law books being used to hold them.

(T)eflon(S)hadow wrote:

I agree something has to be done with these detainees. They are not the responsibility of the US Federal Judicial system, "Foreign Policy" makers, or the tax-paying citizens. Fly them back to their countries where they were detained, whether that be Afghanistan, Iraq, Turkey, Uzbekistan, Pakistan, or it does not matter. The US Military in charge of them should work this out and get them out of Gitmo. Period.
Finally something we agree on.
Kmar
Truth is my Bitch
+5,695|7023|132 and Bush

PureFodder wrote:

Kmarion wrote:

PureFodder wrote:

Huge numbers of Europeans died trying to stop the Nazis. Communism came out of the Soviet Union not Europe. At the most you can dump these things on Germany. Italy and Greece can't be mocked by Americans as the US was heavlily supporting the facism there.
After WWII most of Europe gave up on previous warmongering, while the US busied itself ovethrowing South American democracies and replacing them with brutal mass murdering dictatorships and trying to kill most of everyone in Indochina. Again, Europe has NOT got a lovely past The British Empire was horribly barbaric, but the horrible bits are futher in the past than Americas.

Again, my statement that the US is playing catch-up is historically accurate.
Right, and the French didn't mirror our revolution while the old world powers watched? Are you really so naive as to think Europe didn't help establish these same dictators? When you get over your insatiable desire to bash US foreign policy you might want to take a look at your own.
For starters, the US War of Independence was carried out by European settlers, hence it was as much our idea as yours. We share responsability for that one. The French didn't mirror your revolution, they went WAY beyond it. Abolished slavery, introduced things like welfare and the social contract, universal education etc.

Europe certainly did establish horrible dictators all over the place and invaded places, killed vast numbers of people etc. but have largely given up on this since WWII (Britain being the middle ground between Eruope and the US). The US has not. My point was that Europe generally stopped doing these things further in the past than the US did. Again, this is shown by the historical record. Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Guatemala, Haiti, Nicaragua, Panama etc. These all occured AFTER Europe largely stopped doing this. Your link is UK arms deals to Iraq, which the US also carried out, as well as overwhelming military support for the brutal atrocities carried out by Turkey in the 90s, Colombia, Indonesia amongst others. At the very best you can argue that the US does the same things as Europe but on a larger scale. The Dutch bloke is just one bloke and has been caught an tried for what he did showing that the society is agaisnt his action. The US government hasn't been tried for what they've been doing, showing the difference between these two cases.

Again, the historical record shows that the US has been playing catch-up with Europe.
There is a difference between my acestors and yours. Mine had the courage to leave the old and suppressive world behind. Thats a key difference. Europe has played a part in nearly every one of the events you mentioned. It's pretty funny to see you claim yourselves as champions of freedom when it was your fucked imperialistic policies that created the majority of the mess the rest of the world must now deal with.

Keep telling yourself the Europe leads the way and I'm sure you will find someone blind enough to actually believe it.
Xbone Stormsurgezz
Kmar
Truth is my Bitch
+5,695|7023|132 and Bush

Bertster7 wrote:

Absolutely right. The founding fathers were certainly pioneers, but the ideals they were putting into practice were well established ones predominantly dreamt up by European philosophers and political thinkers. Though that shouldn't detract from the fact that they realised these ideals by establishing a state built upon them. Kudos to them for that.
I mentioned that. Look at all of my replies the next time you jump into a debate.

Kmarion wrote:

We dumped slavery in less than 100 years.. how about you my lord? How long was it that you were ruled by "descendants of god".
No time at all, certainly in post-Christian Europe, though I see what you're getting at. There is a marked difference between claiming to be a descendant of God and claiming to be chosen or appointed by God - which is the situation we had here. You may argue the difference is subtle, but I'm sure many would disagree.
I was simply citing the centuries Europe had of living under oppressive rule.
In any case, the point remains, that the US when the US was founded it had a modern and enlightened outlook. It is a shame that from these exceedingly hopeful beginnings, from the perspective of liberty, social equality and justice, the US has not kept pace with developments in Europe - though have exceeded Europe's advances in many other areas. An example is slavery which was abolished in Europe decades before in the US, despite the more enlightened founding principles there.
Shame? No, I said every society must deal with fighting the hand of infringement. From time to time it will creep. If you read the op you would see that these forces are indeed being fought. You should also take note that it was the lawyers from our own military that got this to the supreme court... those war criminals.
The argument that:

Kmarion wrote:

The United States has done more for freedom in two hundred years than the rest of the world has done in two thousand.
on a national scale concerning personal liberty, is non-existent.

(On an international scale it could certainly be argued that the role of the US in WWII protected the freedoms of many people wolrdwide, though there are counter arguments to this and it is not something the US can take sole credit for. The Cold War is an even more dubious example, since the US could plausibly be held accountable for starting it, despite the peacemaking efforts of Churchill in his final years as Prime Minister after Atlee's government had transformed Britain. Regardless of that, personal rights and liberties are what freedom is all about.)

Freedom stems from rights and true freedom stems from effectively enforced rights. This may seem to be counter-intuitive, since enforcement of any kind is clearly an infringement upon someones freedoms. Yet overall the freedoms of the masses must outweigh the freedoms of the individual so that all of society is free to more or less the same extent, it is here that the rights of the individual come into play and those rights are protected by laws. Laws are imposed by a governing body, typically a government. However the individual must also have rights that protect them from the governing body and ensure that the laws of the land are enforced in a fair and just fashion. It is these rights and freedoms that must be examined in cases such as these and the essence of US individual rights and liberties have been copied directly from English common law. I refer you to the text of the Supreme Court ruling in this case regarding the application of Habeus Corpus (also an English instigated personal freedom taken directly from the Magna Carta):

Ruling of the US Supreme Court on BOUMEDIENE ET AL. v. BUSH, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES, ET AL. wrote:

The common-law writ was codified by the Habeas Corpus Act of 1679, which “stood alongside Magna Charta and the English Bill of Rights of 1689 as a towering common law lighthouse of liberty—a beacon by which framing lawyers in America consciously steered their course.
Much of the Supreme Court ruling references incidents of precedent in England regarding the enforcement of these rights. An example of how seriously this right has impacted on English culture and how seriously it is taken can again be found within the text of the Supreme Court ruling:

Ruling of the US Supreme Court on BOUMEDIENE ET AL. v. BUSH, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES, ET AL. wrote:

A notable example from this period was Darnel’s Case, 3 How. St. Tr. 1 (K. B. 1627). The events giving rise to the case began when, in a display of the Stuart penchant for authoritarian excess, Charles I demanded that Darnel and at least four others lend him money. Upon their refusal,they were imprisoned. The prisoners sought a writ of habeas corpus; and the King filed a return in the form of a warrant signed by the Attorney General. Ibid. The court held this was a sufficient answer and justified the subjects’ continued imprisonment. Id., at 59.
There was an immediate outcry of protest. The House of Commons promptly passed the Petition of Right, 3 Car. 1,ch. 1 (1627), 5 Statutes of the Realm 23, 24 (reprint 1963),which condemned executive “imprison[ment] without any cause” shown, and declared that “no freeman in any such manner as is before mencioned [shall] be imprisoned or deteined.” Yet a full legislative response was long delayed.
The King soon began to abuse his authority again,and Parliament was dissolved.
These events led to (indirectly, but the dissolution of Parliament over this issue was a key factor - the new Parliament created afterwards so the King could raise money included Oliver Cromwell and drew up the Petition of Right upon its inception) the English civil war after which Charles I was executed and England became a Republic (The Commonwealth of England) in 1649. We didn't like the Republic much and so reintroduced the Monarchy in 1660. The magnitude of the events surrounding this demonstrates well how important these personal freedoms were taken to be, even more than three centuries ago - the implications of which should bear strongly upon Bush.
I mentioned the Magna Carta and it's influence. If you think on a national scale personal liberty is non existence then you really haven't any idea of what's happening over here. A society without personal liberties does not have groups like the ACLU. As an American living in this society I can tell you we are closer to Anarchy, which is the opposite of a police state.

This argument is getting absurd. Europeans want to claim of all the achievements of the United States as their own, yet when it comes to pointing out the struggles of personal freedoms here they want no ancestral association. /joke
Xbone Stormsurgezz
PureFodder
Member
+225|6707

Kmarion wrote:

PureFodder wrote:

Kmarion wrote:

Right, and the French didn't mirror our revolution while the old world powers watched? Are you really so naive as to think Europe didn't help establish these same dictators? When you get over your insatiable desire to bash US foreign policy you might want to take a look at your own.
For starters, the US War of Independence was carried out by European settlers, hence it was as much our idea as yours. We share responsability for that one. The French didn't mirror your revolution, they went WAY beyond it. Abolished slavery, introduced things like welfare and the social contract, universal education etc.

Europe certainly did establish horrible dictators all over the place and invaded places, killed vast numbers of people etc. but have largely given up on this since WWII (Britain being the middle ground between Eruope and the US). The US has not. My point was that Europe generally stopped doing these things further in the past than the US did. Again, this is shown by the historical record. Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Guatemala, Haiti, Nicaragua, Panama etc. These all occured AFTER Europe largely stopped doing this. Your link is UK arms deals to Iraq, which the US also carried out, as well as overwhelming military support for the brutal atrocities carried out by Turkey in the 90s, Colombia, Indonesia amongst others. At the very best you can argue that the US does the same things as Europe but on a larger scale. The Dutch bloke is just one bloke and has been caught an tried for what he did showing that the society is agaisnt his action. The US government hasn't been tried for what they've been doing, showing the difference between these two cases.

Again, the historical record shows that the US has been playing catch-up with Europe.
There is a difference between my acestors and yours. Mine had the courage to leave the old and suppressive world behind. Thats a key difference. Europe has played a part in nearly every one of the events you mentioned. It's pretty funny to see you claim yourselves as champions when it was your fucked imperialistic policies that created the majority of the mess the rest of the world must now deal with.

Keep telling yourself the Europe leads the way and I'm sure you will find someone blind enough to actually believe it.
My ancestory stayed and made their home country better, fast forward a few hundred years and it turns out that those who stayed ended up furthering human rights faster than those who left as is shown by banning slavery, justice system, workers rights, civil rights, cutting back on the murderous wars of agression etc. earlier than the Americans did. Yours left the supressive world behind, and went straigt ahead massacring everyone in sight. A major step backwards in terms of human rights, not forwards.

You are right that a lot of America's foreign policies were taken from Europes old policies, but the point I keep making and showing to be true is that the US took over those policies when Europe was ditching them, hence Europe took steps towards human rights and the US didn't. Hence the US was playing catch-up.

You still haven't explained the fact that on almost any human rights issue except freedom of speech, the US was behind Europe and today maintains a worse human rights record than most European countries.

I'm actually using evidence and showing what I am saying is true, you're simply stating that I am wrong and ignoring all of the facts.
Kmar
Truth is my Bitch
+5,695|7023|132 and Bush

PureFodder wrote:

Kmarion wrote:

PureFodder wrote:

For starters, the US War of Independence was carried out by European settlers, hence it was as much our idea as yours. We share responsability for that one. The French didn't mirror your revolution, they went WAY beyond it. Abolished slavery, introduced things like welfare and the social contract, universal education etc.

Europe certainly did establish horrible dictators all over the place and invaded places, killed vast numbers of people etc. but have largely given up on this since WWII (Britain being the middle ground between Eruope and the US). The US has not. My point was that Europe generally stopped doing these things further in the past than the US did. Again, this is shown by the historical record. Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Guatemala, Haiti, Nicaragua, Panama etc. These all occured AFTER Europe largely stopped doing this. Your link is UK arms deals to Iraq, which the US also carried out, as well as overwhelming military support for the brutal atrocities carried out by Turkey in the 90s, Colombia, Indonesia amongst others. At the very best you can argue that the US does the same things as Europe but on a larger scale. The Dutch bloke is just one bloke and has been caught an tried for what he did showing that the society is agaisnt his action. The US government hasn't been tried for what they've been doing, showing the difference between these two cases.

Again, the historical record shows that the US has been playing catch-up with Europe.
There is a difference between my acestors and yours. Mine had the courage to leave the old and suppressive world behind. Thats a key difference. Europe has played a part in nearly every one of the events you mentioned. It's pretty funny to see you claim yourselves as champions when it was your fucked imperialistic policies that created the majority of the mess the rest of the world must now deal with.

Keep telling yourself the Europe leads the way and I'm sure you will find someone blind enough to actually believe it.
My ancestory stayed and made their home country better, fast forward a few hundred years and it turns out that those who stayed ended up furthering human rights faster than those who left as is shown by banning slavery, justice system, workers rights, civil rights, cutting back on the murderous wars of agression etc. earlier than the Americans did. Yours left the supressive world behind, and went straigt ahead massacring everyone in sight. A major step backwards in terms of human rights, not forwards.

You are right that a lot of America's foreign policies were taken from Europes old policies, but the point I keep making and showing to be true is that the US took over those policies when Europe was ditching them, hence Europe took steps towards human rights and the US didn't. Hence the US was playing catch-up.

You still haven't explained the fact that on almost any human rights issue except freedom of speech, the US was behind Europe and today maintains a worse human rights record than most European countries.

I'm actually using evidence and showing what I am saying is true, you're simply stating that I am wrong and ignoring all of the facts.
Your ancestors settled for the status quo. Then continued it's imperialistic ways while almost destroying the whole of humanity twice. You will have to excuse me if I don't by into your "we've moved on now" view. Especially considering some of the survivors from your last display of human rights are still alive. America soon ditched slavery, and founded itself on the principle of equal rights. I'd hardly call that continuing Europe's old ways. Your ignorance towards our history is blatantly obvious. Why don't you do yourself a favor here and investigate our civil rights movement. One of the greatest personal freedoms (Freedom of speech/expression) here far exceeds yours. You preach about infringement of personal freedoms when you can't even scratch your nuts in your country without it being filmed.


I'm actually using evidence and showing what I am saying is true, you're simply stating that I am wrong and ignoring all of the facts.
Which evidence? Surrendering your sovereignty to the EU? Is this forward or backwards?

WE ALL face our own challenges. You just stepped in a pile of shit when you came out right from the start with your "Eurpoe is like teh awesomest" statement.
Xbone Stormsurgezz
FEOS
Bellicose Yankee Air Pirate
+1,182|6833|'Murka

Dilbert_X wrote:

I too was curious about these Somalian Villages that we "carpet bombed"
I guess he means the ones flattened by AC130s to get one or two suspected AQ.
Then please point THOSE out. Didn't happen.

Dilbert_X wrote:

The issue with torture has been resolved, both in the military and in the intelligence services.
Yeah funny, the US President can have anyone tortured if he wants to.
Not according to either the Supreme Court or the Legislative Branch. That whole "separation of powers" thing just keeps mucking up your conspiracies, Dilbert.

Gotta be frustrating.
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein

Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
PureFodder
Member
+225|6707

Kmarion wrote:

Your ancestors settled for the status quo. Then continued it's imperialistic ways while almost destroying the whole of humanity twice. You will have to excuse me if I don't by into your "we've moved on now" view. Especially considering some of the survivors from your last display of human rights are still alive. America soon ditched slavery, and founded itself on the principle of equal rights. I'd hardly call that continuing Europe's old ways. Your ignorance towards our history is blatantly obvious. Why don't you do yourself a favor here and investigate our civil rights movement. One of the greatest personal freedoms (Freedom of speech/expression) here far exceeds yours. You preach about infringement of personal freedoms when you can't even scratch your nuts in your country without it being filmed.


I'm actually using evidence and showing what I am saying is true, you're simply stating that I am wrong and ignoring all of the facts.
Which evidence? Surrendering your sovereignty to the EU? Is this forward or backwards?

WE ALL face our own challenges. You just stepped in a pile of shit when you came out right from the start with your "Eurpoe is like teh awesomest" statement.
According to you, America was founded by progressive Europeans (ie. the more humane of the Europeans), ie. the US started off with more advanced human rights, thanks to a select bunch of Europeans that founded the US. Between the founding of the US and now Europe has leapfrogged the US in pretty well every measure of human rights except freedom of speech which existed at the very beginning. So who was continuing the status quo?

Lets take a look back at the last time humanity was almost destroyed, the Cuban missile crisis. That involved the US and not Europe. Again, history shows that the US is playing catchup in the 'not almost destroying humanity' stakes.

The brutal US attacks in Indochina are much closer to the present than either world war, in which the majoirty of Europe was on the humanity side.

You say that America soon ditched slavery, but Europe did it significantly earlier. America may have founded itself on the idea of equal rights, but the reality of equal rights came a lot later in the US. The history of US civil rights shows that coloured people were second class citizens right up to the 60s, hardly trailblazing, more catch-up.

Worker rights trailed decades behind Europe, and still fall well short today. Take child labour for example, In Britain legislation increasing inspection, shortening hours and increasing the age at which they could work began in 1802 and was largely in place by 1878. The first sucessful US legislation on child labour was in 1938. Another historical example of US catch-up on human rights.

The most influential human rights groups, Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch are both European.

Surrendering soverignty to the EU to make a situation similar to the USA. Hardly a good platform to criticize Europe.

The US still maintains a worse human rights record than most European countries, even excluding Gitmo.

Other than freedom of speech, which was technically the product of European colonists, but anyway. Name any human rights issue in which the US actually lead the world.

This isn't a purely one way never broken trend, but it's simply historical fact that the US trailed Europe on most human rights issues.
Kmar
Truth is my Bitch
+5,695|7023|132 and Bush

According to you, America was founded by progressive Europeans (ie. the more humane of the Europeans), ie. the US started off with more advanced human rights, thanks to a select bunch of Europeans that founded the US. Between the founding of the US and now Europe has leapfrogged the US in pretty well every measure of human rights except freedom of speech which existed at the very beginning. So who was continuing the status quo?
Exactly! A select bunch. Thanks for seeing it my way. Just more vague statements of how much further along Europe is . Start giving me specifics and we can address them.

Your comparing the Cuban missle crisis to WWI and WWII? I don't recall millions of people dieing in the Cuban missle crisis. If anything conflict was avoided because cool heads and diplomacy prevailed.

The United States ditched slavery much sooner relatively speaking. Europe had slavery embeded in it's society centuries before you abolished it. Britain abolished it 29 years sooner and France was only 14 years prior. Hardly "significant" considering it took you 3 centuries to figure it out.

The brutal US attacks in Indochina are much closer to the present than either world war, in which the majoirty of Europe was on the humanity side.
Indochina was a mark on the US to be sure. But of course you were committing your own atrocities while hiding under the umbrella of pacifism. We all have our demons.

The US still maintains a worse human rights record than most European countries, even excluding Gitmo.
Take a look at your current human trafficking problem. Then give me specific examples. I actually agree with giving Gitmo detainees trial in the states, a point that has been lost somewhere during this discussion. But you should also note that our Constitution was designed to protect the citizens of the United States. The bill of rights has no jurisdiction over foreign prisoners of war. If you want a quick lesson with a clear example of how the United States has progressed in this area look up the Alien and Sedition Acts. We are a country at war. If the United States is committing war crimes it needs to be brought to the international courts.

Worker rights trailed decades behind Europe, and still fall well short today. Take child labour for example, In Britain legislation increasing inspection, shortening hours and increasing the age at which they could work began in 1802 and was largely in place by 1878. The first sucessful US legislation on child labour was in 1938. Another historical example of US catch-up on human rights.
Child labor legislation didn't go into effect sooner in the US only because there really wasn't a need for it. We were building a country and tending the fields for 95 percent of the time leading up to it. You on the other hand already had your infrastructure in place. You exploited your children for hundreds of years prior.
We have our ACLU who never misses an opportunity to take a case. This is in addition to the international (non government run) Amnesty International. As far as I know Human Rights Watch is head quartered in New York. We also have The United States Commission on Civil Rights

Surrendering sovereignty to the EU to make a situation similar to the USA. Hardly a good platform to criticize Europe.
You have me there. I won't argue just for the sake of arguing. I'm a conservative at heart. Somewhere along the road the idea of states rights got hijacked by the bureaucrats in Washington. I was happy to hear that Ireland rejected Lisbon. I think that would have indeed been a step backwards for Europeans.

I don't think you understand the importance of free speech. It is easily the most important right there is. That is the voice of the people.. the only true path to accountability. It is what informs and educates the voters. Without real freedom of speech/expression nothing else matters. It is commonly known that the United States has the least amount of restrictions on free speech.

Where have we lead the way besides free speech? You might start with universal suffrage.
Xbone Stormsurgezz
Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,822|6528|eXtreme to the maX
Then please point THOSE out. Didn't happen.
Yawn - Do you ever pay attention?
http://www.terradaily.com/reports/Penta … s_999.html
'Somali village elders said at least 19 civilians had been killed in the gunship attack on two villages in Somalia's southernmost tip -- Badel and Aayo.
Whitman said the operation was prompted by "credible intelligence that led us to believe we had principal Al-Qaeda leadership in an area where we could identify them and take action against them."'
http://www.iiss.org/whats-new/iiss-in-t … r-strikes/
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/6243459.stm
'Local MP Abdulkadir Haji Mohamoud Dhagane told the BBC that 27 people, mostly civilians, had been killed near Afmadow.'
Not according to either the Supreme Court or the Legislative Branch. That whole "separation of powers" thing just keeps mucking up your conspiracies,
If I remember he reserved the right to produce more signing statements - I'll check it.
Fuck Israel
PureFodder
Member
+225|6707

Kmarion wrote:

According to you, America was founded by progressive Europeans (ie. the more humane of the Europeans), ie. the US started off with more advanced human rights, thanks to a select bunch of Europeans that founded the US. Between the founding of the US and now Europe has leapfrogged the US in pretty well every measure of human rights except freedom of speech which existed at the very beginning. So who was continuing the status quo?
Exactly! A select bunch. Thanks for seeing it my way. Just more vague statements of how much further along Europe is . Start giving me specifics and we can address them.

Your comparing the Cuban missle crisis to WWI and WWII? I don't recall millions of people dieing in the Cuban missle crisis. If anything conflict was avoided because cool heads and diplomacy prevailed.
The difference between the two was that WWI / WWII were never going to wipe out humanity, they were at the most going to kill millions which they did. The Cuban missile crisis literally held the future of humanity in the balance.

Kmarion wrote:

The United States ditched slavery much sooner relatively speaking. Europe had slavery embeded in it's society centuries before you abolished it. Britain abolished it 29 years sooner and France was only 14 years prior. Hardly "significant" considering it took you 3 centuries to figure it out.
Now you are arguing against yourself. Either the US started at a level of human rights and morality that exceeded Europe's and therfore should have banned slavery earlier, or the US began at the same level as Europe and still took longer. The centuries of slavery prior to the founding of the US had exacly as much to do with US ancestry as European ancestry. Either way, the US ultimately trailed Europe by decades.

Kmarion wrote:

The brutal US attacks in Indochina are much closer to the present than either world war, in which the majoirty of Europe was on the humanity side.
Indochina was a mark on the US to be sure. But of course you were committing your own atrocities while hiding under the umbrella of pacifism. We all have our demons.
Fair enough, European countries have comitted some fairly terrible acts of agression since WWII, nothing on the scale of Indochina, but entirely reprehensable none the less.

Kmarion wrote:

The US still maintains a worse human rights record than most European countries, even excluding Gitmo.
Take a look at your current human trafficking problem. Then give me specific examples. I actually agree with giving Gitmo detainees trial in the states, a point that has been lost somewhere during this discussion. But you should also note that our Constitution was designed to protect the citizens of the United States. The bill of rights has no jurisdiction over foreign prisoners of war. If you want a quick lesson with a clear example of how the United States has progressed in this area look up the Alien and Sedition Acts. We are a country at war. If the United States is committing war crimes it needs to be brought to the international courts.

Worker rights trailed decades behind Europe, and still fall well short today. Take child labour for example, In Britain legislation increasing inspection, shortening hours and increasing the age at which they could work began in 1802 and was largely in place by 1878. The first sucessful US legislation on child labour was in 1938. Another historical example of US catch-up on human rights.
Child labor legislation didn't go into effect sooner in the US only because there really wasn't a need for it. We were building a country and tending the fields for 95 percent of the time leading up to it. You on the other hand already had your infrastructure in place. You exploited your children for hundreds of years prior.
Child labour was a massive problem in the US in the 1800s and early 1900s, In 1900 a quarter of the male workforce was under the age of 15.
http://eh.net/encyclopedia/article/whaples.childlabor. Yes children were exploited in Europe, but Europe put in restrictions earlier than the US did. If the US was so advanced in terms of human rights, why didn't they sort this out before Europe, instead having to catch up with the European standard. Just to show the scale of this, it's still not resolved in the US.
http://www.hrw.org/reports/2000/frmwrkr/

Kmarion wrote:

We have our ACLU who never misses an opportunity to take a case. This is in addition to the international (non government run) Amnesty International. As far as I know Human Rights Watch is head quartered in New York. We also have The United States Commission on Civil Rights
The ACLU is domestic, the other two were founded in Europe and later moved to the US

Kmarion wrote:

Surrendering sovereignty to the EU to make a situation similar to the USA. Hardly a good platform to criticize Europe.
You have me there. I won't argue just for the sake of arguing. I'm a conservative at heart. Somewhere along the road the idea of states rights got hijacked by the bureaucrats in Washington. I was happy to hear that Ireland rejected Lisbon. I think that would have indeed been a step backwards for Europeans.

I don't think you understand the importance of free speech. It is easily the most important right there is. That is the voice of the people.. the only true path to accountability. It is what informs and educates the voters. Without real freedom of speech/expression nothing else matters. It is commonly known that the United States has the least amount of restrictions on free speech.

Where have we lead the way besides free speech? You might start with universal suffrage.
I'm absolutley with you on the free speech issue, as pretty well all my posts have pointed out, US freedom of speech is better than any other country. As far as votes for women goes, it's somewhat of a draw. Some European countries beat the US, some lagged behind (the Swiss only figured it out in the 70s) As far as Britain goes, the rights for women over 30 to vote came before the US, but full equal voting rights came after.

As far as currnet human rights go, there's child labour,
The US justice system, which is far behind Europe's, including; Death penalty, death penalty to the mentally ill, large sentencing and solitary confinement of mentally ill prisoners, endemic racist sentencing, huge sentencing disparaties between rich and poor people convicted of similar crimes, excessive sentencing for minor crimes, high rates of police brutality little of which goes punished, prison conditions well below any acceptable level, children recieveing life-means-life sentences (the only country in the world that does this).
http://www.hrw.org/doc/?t=usa_sentencing

Next we have labour rights; use of children in agricultural work, abuse of immigrant workers, denial of rights to organise and collectively bargain for contracts, well below European standards.
http://www.hrw.org/doc/?t=usa_labor

Things like lesbian and gay rights, from marriage to don't ask don't tell. All fairly obvious and well known. Varoius issues relating to immigration.
http://www.hrw.org/doc/?t=usa_noncitizens

For the purpose of fairness, here's the link the Britains dirty laundry. @ anyone from another country, I urge you to go look up your own country's human rights record, you may be surprised.
http://www.hrw.org/doc?t=europe&c=uk
FEOS
Bellicose Yankee Air Pirate
+1,182|6833|'Murka

Dilbert_X wrote:

Then please point THOSE out. Didn't happen.
Yawn - Do you ever pay attention?
http://www.terradaily.com/reports/Penta … s_999.html
'Somali village elders said at least 19 civilians had been killed in the gunship attack on two villages in Somalia's southernmost tip -- Badel and Aayo.
Whitman said the operation was prompted by "credible intelligence that led us to believe we had principal Al-Qaeda leadership in an area where we could identify them and take action against them."'
http://www.iiss.org/whats-new/iiss-in-t … r-strikes/
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/6243459.stm
'Local MP Abdulkadir Haji Mohamoud Dhagane told the BBC that 27 people, mostly civilians, had been killed near Afmadow.'
And any of those sources say the village in question was "flattened" or "carpet bombed" where? The closest one to discussing the extent of damage was the Reuters report, but it wasn't specific. It merely said the AC-130 is highly accurate then implied they just sprayed (they didn't) by talking about the collateral damage associated with the strike.

Dilbert_X wrote:

Not according to either the Supreme Court or the Legislative Branch. That whole "separation of powers" thing just keeps mucking up your conspiracies,
If I remember he reserved the right to produce more signing statements - I'll check it.
Signing statements are irrelevant WRT Supreme Court decisions.

Last edited by FEOS (2008-06-15 04:29:33)

“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein

Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,822|6528|eXtreme to the maX
Yeah whatever, 19 civilians killed in one village, 27 in another seems close enough to me.
Fuck Israel

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