Wednesday, October 13, 2010

And FBI witnesses are paid off? That does a lot for their credibility.

http://www.democracynow.org/2010/10/6/entrapment_or_foiling_terror_fbis_reliance
So now the government is redacting legal opinions to support their case for indefinite detention? What?!?!

http://www.democracynow.org/2010/10/13/a_tale_of_2_gitmo_opinions

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

US v Comstock

Indefinite detention after registered sex offenders serve term
What implications does this have for the war on terror? The analogy isn't perfect (here, ex-offenders would be held in "civil commitment" after serving their term, while terror suspects are held without a right to challenge their detention before trial).

Monday, March 8, 2010

Should Congress Go Paperless?

Should Congress Go Paperless?: "

Rep. Chris Lee [R, NY-26] and the 39 bipartisan co-sponsors of his recently introduced STOP the OverPrinting Act’ think so.


Currently, when a bill is introduced into Congress, the Government Printing Office (GPO) automatically prints five copies of the entire text for the office of each co-sponsor. That means that for H.R. 3962, the House’s health care bill, which is 2,070 pages long and has 7 total sponsors, the GPO printed out a total of 72,450 pages. That’s 151 reams.


The STOP the Overprinting Act would only allow bills to be printed by the GPO if they are specifically requested by a member of Congress or a committee. According to Lee, ‘the Congressional Research Service estimates the potential cost savings of Lee’s legislation would be upwards of $2.2 million in 2010 alone.’ Every bill is already made available to members of Congress and the public on the internet. Sites like OpenCongress, Thomas and GovTrack post them, as does the GPO itself through their GPO Access website. For lawmakers who find paper copies of bills easier to read and digest, Lee’s bill would accommodate them.


Presumably, since this isn’t law yet, 5 copies of the STOP the OverPrinting Act’ were printed up by the GPO and distributed to each of its 40 sponsors. But it’s a short bill — only 3 pages long — so it only amounted to 600 pages, or one and a quarter reams.


Image used under CC license from pawpaw67.

"



(Via Open Congress : Blog.)

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

uighur case dismissed

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/02/us/politics/02detain.html

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

The Torture Memo John Yoo Should Have Written

The Torture Memo John Yoo Should Have Written: "

On February 19, the Department of Justice released the long-awaited 261-page Report of the Office of Professional Responsibility (OPR), which concluded, among other things, that in his legal memos on torture and Presidential power, John Yoo had 'committed intentional professional misconduct when he violated his duty to exercise independent legal judgment and render thorough, objective, and candid legal advice.' A senior Justice Department official, acknowledged that he had not reviewed all the documents available to the OPR, found that Yoo exercised 'poor

read more

"



(Via Truthout - Opinion.)

D.C. same-sex marriages allowed

D.C. same-sex marriages allowed: "

Chief Justice John G. Roberts, Jr., refused on Tuesday to block a District of Columbia court’s order that cleared the way for same-sex couples to get marriage licenses and wed in the capital city, beginning on Wednesday.  The Chief Justice, in denying an emergency stay filed by opponents of gay marriage, issued a three-page opinion, found here, explaining his action.   He acted in his role as Circuit Justice for the D.C. area; the issue was not referred to the full Court.


Even while saying a delay was not now legally justified, Roberts noted that the challengers may still try to undo the new D.C. marriage provision by attempting to put it on the ballot asking local voters to repeal the law.  That separate maneuver is now under review in the D.C. Court of Appeals, Washington’s highest local court.




"



(Via SCOTUSblog.)

Friday, February 26, 2010

Democrats Strip Torture Amendment From Intelligence Bill

Democrats Strip Torture Amendment From Intelligence Bill: "

The House today could vote on an intelligence authorization bill for the current fiscal year, but only after an amendment allowing criminal prosecutions for CIA officers engaging in torture was stripped from it.


The House was supposed to consider the Intelligence Authorization Act (H.R.2701) yesterday but it was pulled from the floor at the last minute over the torture amendment drafted by Rep. Silvestre Reyes [D, TX-16]. The provision allows for a 15-year sentence for any intelligence community official who engages in torture. The Washington Independent has more:


Specifically, the proposed Cruel, Inhuman and Degrading Interrogations Prohibition Act proscribes ‘forcing the individual to be naked, perform sexual acts or pose in a sexual manner’ — a la Abu Ghraib — ‘beatings, electrical shock, burns, or inflicting physical pain; waterboarding; using military working dogs; inducing hypothermia’ — it happened at Guantanamo to Mohammed al-Qatani — sleep deprivation, dietary manipulation, denial of medical care, ‘using force or the threat of force’; ‘mock executions;’ religious desecration in an intelligence context; ‘sensory deprivation’; ‘prolonged isolation’; ‘placing hoods or sacks over the heads of the individual;’ ‘exploiting the phobias of the individual’ and more. Basically, it clarifies that the entire parade of outside-the-Army-Field-Manual-on-Interrogation horrors during the Bush administration are criminal acts. We’ll see if this ever actually makes it to President Obama’s desk.

House Republicans object to the idea because they feel it places dangerous limits on the intelligence community. They also object to the manner in which the provision was included in the intelligence bill as David Waldman explains:


The provisions in question were added to the manager’s amendment approved for floor action in Wednesday night’s Rules Committee hearing, and Republicans felt blindsided, no doubt as though someone had thrown a hood over their heads, bound their hands and throttled them. Adding this measure to the manager’s amendment has the effect of allowing the House Intelligence Committee to bypass having hearings on the proposal, and holding a vote in committee on including it in the bill. There’s still a vote on the floor, but only on the overall manager’s amendment, which contains a number of not necessarily related provisions, so the vote’s not very ‘clean’ on the issue.

An attempt to simply excise the amendment from the intelligence bill through unanimous consent was thwarted by House Republicans, forcing the Democrats to remove the entire bill from the floor.


Republicans, however, weren’t the only ones opposed to Slaughter’s torture provision. Democratic House leaders felt the controversial idea would sink the entire bill and the White House opposes the provision over concerns that it infringes on the executive power of the president.

"



(Via Open Congress : Blog.)

Monday, February 22, 2010

Next major First Amendment test

Next major First Amendment test: "

At 10 a.m. Tuesday, the Supreme Court will hear one hour of oral argument in two consolidated cases, Holder v. Humanitarian Law Project, et al., (08-1498), and Humanitarian Law Project, et al., v. Holder (09-89).  David D. Cole, a Georgetown law professor, will argue first, for the Project’s side, and U.S. Solicitor General Elena Kagan will then argue for the United States.  Documents filed in the case may be found at this page on ScotusWiki.


———————–


Amid a hot political debate in Washington on whether the government is being tough enough on terrorists, the Supreme Court examines whether Congress acted unconstitutionally in making it a crime to provide a wide range of support to organizations that the government has blacklisted under anti-terrorism laws passed in 1996, 2001 and 2004.  The review of the 2001 provisions brings before the Court, for the first time,  the USA Patriot Act — the sweeping law passed by Congress six weeks after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.



Background


For the past 12 years, Americans who are descendants or supporters of the Tamil people, a linguistic group native to India, Sri Lanka and Malaysia with two thousand years of history, have been locked in a courthouse battle with the U.S. government.   As the case reaches the Supreme Court, it shapes up as the next major test of the First Amendment, following the Court’s deeply controversial ruling Jan. 21 on the free speech rights, in politics, of U.S. corporations (Citizens United v. FEC). In fact, within hours after the Court decided the corporations case, a brief filed in the Tamils’ case repeatedly cited that ruling to support their First Amendment claims.


From the beginning, and still, the legal adversaries have proceeded on totally contradictory perceptions: the Tamil descendants insisting that they only want to provide completely benign aid to a humanitarian cause and, indeed, to encourage non-violence, with the government countering that the groups they want to aid are  deeply involved in widespread terrorist violence in Europe and Asia. 


 The challengers also are  arguing that the government wants to wipe out a host of activity shielded by the First Amendment, and the government is contending that it has no such aim.  The Supreme Court will decide who is right when it rules on two cases being argued together. Each side partly won and partly lost in two rounds of lower court rulings, but each side will argue all parts of the case when they appear before the Justices.


The Tamils’ challenge, filed in federal court in 1998,  involves two U.S. citizens, California college professor Ralph D. Fertig and New York medical doctor Nagalingam Jeyaligam, along with the organization that Fertig serves as president — the Humanitarian Law Project — and five pro-Tamil organizations in the U.S.  Those groups are Ilankai Thamil Sangam, Tamils of Northern California, Tamil Welfare and Human Rights Committee, Federation of Tamil Sangams of North America, and World Tamil Coordinating Committee.


Their lawsuit was filed to gain the right, without threat of criminal prosecution, to continue their efforts ‘to speak to, for, and in coordination with’ two organizations that are on the U.S. list of designated terrorist groups.  Those two groups — the Kurdistan Workers’ Party and the Libertarian Tigers of Tamil Eslam — engage in ‘a wide range of lawful, non-violent activity,’ and that is all that the Americans seek to support, their lawyers have argued.


The federal government, however, told the Court that the Workers’ party (sometimes called the ‘PKK’) ‘has waged a violent insurgency that has claimed over 22,000 lives throughout western Europe,’ and that the Tamil Tigers  organization ‘has used suicide bombings and political assassinations in its campaign for independence’ in Sri Lanka, ‘killing hundreds of civilians in the process’ — including the president of Sir Lanka and two other high government officials there.


The legal dispute began two years after Congress gave the U.S. Secretary of State power to designate a group as a ‘foreign terrorist organization,’ and criminalized ‘material support’ to such a group.  As amended by the Patriot Act of 2001 and a new anti-terrorism law in 2004, the ‘material support’ law has become the government’s main legal weapon in its ‘war on terrorism.’  Since 2001, the Justice Department has charged some 120 defnedants with violations of the law, obtaining convictions in only about half of the cases.   The Department calls the law ‘a vital part of the Nation’s effort to fight international terrorism.’  The concept of ‘material support’ for terrorism written into the law also has provided a legal rationale for the detention of individuals captured overseas and held at Guantanamo Bay.


Before the Supreme Court, the constitutional dispute tests five parts of the law.  Three of those were struck down by lower courts: criminalizing ‘material support’ in the form of ‘service,’  ’training,’ or ‘expert advice or assistance.’  The lower courts found those to be unconstitutionally vague and sweeping too broadly, possibly criminalizing free speech.  Two other provisions were upheld below: support in the form of  ‘personnel’ or ‘expert advice or assistance’ if it was ‘derived from scientific or technical knowledge.’


In an earlier round in the case, the Tamils sought Supreme Court review, but that was denied in 2001.   The case then returned to lower courts, resulting in the split decision now before the Justices.


Petitions for Certiorari


The Justice Department, last June 4, took the case back to the Supreme Court, arguing that the decision to block enforcement of the three provisions ‘seriously undermines the statutory scheme created by Congress’ to help the government fight terrorism globally.  It noted that some of the successful prosecutions it has carried out under the law involved parts that were nullified by the Ninth Circuit Court in its latest ruling.


The central theme of the government’s appeal is that the law is not aimed at curbing speech, but only targets ‘conduct,’ and any impact on free expression is merely ‘incidental.’  It has also pressed the point that the law requires proof that the actions prosecuted were carried out with knowledge that they were helping a terrorist organization.  If there is any vagueness in the law’s wording, the petition contended, this last requirement cures it.


Moreover, it argued, the words and phrases nullified by the lower courts cannot be considered vague on their own, because they are ’clear and readily intelligible to the average person.’ 


The petition noted that Congress had included in the law a direction to the courts where it might be challenged, mandating that they were not to read the law to violate the rights safeguarded by the First Amendment.  The lower courts should have followed that direction, and found a way to uphold the law by narrowing its scope, if necessary to save it.  The Court, it added, would be free to interpret the law now so that it did not apply to ‘independent advocacy.’


A month later, the Tamils and their organizations opposed Supreme Court review of the government appeal, arguing that the lower courts had not split on the validity of the law, the decisions at issue had in fact left the ‘material support’ law largely intact, and had put no ‘substantial limits’ on the government’s authority to prosecute aid to terrorists.  In addition, they contended that the lower court left room for Congress to act further, if it chose to do so.


Still, the Tamils suggested that, if the Justices did agree to rule on the provisions tested by the government’s appeal, it should take on the entire case and decide on the validity of all five of the provisions at issue.   Their conditional petition vigorously attacked the law’s ban on support in the form of training or advice based on scientific or technical knowledge.  Those words are capable of supporting a criminal prosecution on a wide range of free speech activities, including publishing a statement by a leader of a blacklisted organization, or providing legal advice if such a group filed a human rights complaint with the United Nations.


The main theme of the Tamils’ own petition is that the government itself had demonstrated, by the vigor of its defense of the most sweeping interpretation of the law, that advocacy of the most benign kind could draw a criminal charge.


The Court, in its first round of grants of review this Term on Sept. 30, accepted both the government’s and the Tamils’ petitions, and consolidated them for briefing and oral argument.  In November, the Court granted the two sides’ proposal that the Tamils start the briefing as the ‘top side,’ that both sides would file papers and argue the full range of the issues, and each side would have a chance to file briefs replying to the oher side’s principal brief.


Merits Briefs


The Tamils’ brief on the merits renewed the argument that no one of the five words or phrases at issue could satisfy the First Amendment.  What the two individuals and six organizations seek to do, the brief asserted, involves ‘pure political speech,’ and yet the government considers their activities to be criminal under the ‘material support’ law.


Further bolstering its argument by relying on what government lawyers had said in lower court hearings in the case, the brief said that those lawyers have openly said it would be a crime ‘to submit an amicus brief in federal court, to petition Congress or the United Nations for legal reform, or even to speak to the media, for the benefit of a designated organization, as well as to teach such an organization human rights advocacy or English.’


Directly disputing the government’s claim that the law targets conduct, not speech, the Tamils’ brief said federal lawyers have argued that speech would, in fact, be targeted if it were of ‘benefit’ to a listed group.   Protected speech under the Constitution, it added, ‘protects more than the abstract right to speak ‘independently,’ but also the right, asserted here, to speak to others, in association with others, and at the direction of others.’  Thus, it said, the government’s claim that the law would not apply to ‘independent advocacy’ is not sufficient to save it.


In weighing the law’s validity, the brief said, the Court should use the most demanding constitutional standard: that is, the law would be valid only if it could satisfy ‘strict scrutiny.’  No more lenient standard is justified when ‘pure political speech’ is at risk, it asserted.


In a significant strategic maneuver, the Tamils’ lawyers told the Court that it could avoid answering the constitutional questions altogether by reading into the law a new requirement of proof — that is, proof that an individual or group specifically intended ‘to further an organization’s illegal ends where, as here, pure speech and association are at stake.’  Members of Congress said, when the law was first passed in 1996, that it should reach as far as its could, ‘consistent with the Constitution,’ and members’ said that would mean it reached only support for an organization’s ‘terrorist functions,’ the brief noted.


The government’s merits briefs again stressed the ordinary meaning of the challenged provisions, saying they are readily understood and thus clearly pass any constitutional standard of vagueness.  But, it went on, the Court should not apply the ‘strict scrutiny’ standard, as the Tamils advocated, because it has never done so in interpreting the scope of a criminal law that is challenged as too vague.


At its furthest reach, the law only ‘incidentally captures some expressive activity,’ so a more tolerant constitutional standard is proper, the brief asserted.  The Tamils, it contended, ‘may express any views they wish’ about the two listed organizations, or any other ‘terrorist organization.’


What the law does not allow, and this is all that it bans, is contribution of resources to listed groups ‘that further those groups’ activities,’ according to the government.  In elaborating on that contention, the brief does suggest that the Justice Department does take a broad view of what kind of activity might ‘further’ a listed group’s activities.  For example, it suggested that teaching a listed group how to make an appeal for relief to the United Nations, as the Tamils wish to do, would be teaching it a special skill, and that would bring it within the law’s reach.


The Tamils ‘may not believe such activity to be harmful, but they must understand, as all reasonable observers would, that the activity is covered by the statute’s terms.’


The brief went on to challenge the ‘hypotheticals’ that the Tamils raised about providing legal or journalistic services.  The law, it argued, clearly allows the Tamils to engage in ‘independent advocacy,’ so long as they do so ‘entirely independently.’


What is at stake here, it concluded, is not ‘pure speech’ at all, since the Tamils remain free ‘to lobby Congress, to teach and advise on human rights, to promote peaceful resolution of political disputes, and to advocate for the human rights of minority populations’ — all things that the Tamils said they wanted to do.


The government urged the Court not to consider the Tamils’ maneuver, suggesting a reading of the law to require specific intent to further the listed groups’ terrorism.  That issue was not raised in lower courts in the form outlined in the Tamils’ merits brief, and now comes too late, it said.


Analysis


The Court is confronted in these cases with the potentially challenging task of seeing the listed organizations that are at the center of the government’s attack as simultaneously violence-prone and yet also dedicated to humanitarian causes.  While the government in its advocacy has not over-emphasized the violent record it attributs to the PKK and the Tamil Tigers, it has done enough to make sure that the Court is aware of that.


The two Americans and their six domestic organizations are not linked by the government to those kinds of activities, and yet the government, in discussing the plans that those individuals and groups have, goes to considerable lengths to suggest that the listed groups would ‘benefit.’  The practical effect is to make the separation more difficult. 


And the government has the tactical advantage of knowing that Supreme Court Justices, like every one else in the Nation, are acutely aware of the ongoing threat of global terrorism, and may start out with a reclutance to curb the government’s use of its primary anti-terrorism tool.  The centrality of that law to the anti-terrorism effort is made abundantly clear in the government’s papers.


On the Tamils’ side, they have the advantage of knowing that the Court these days is willing to defend what it perceives to be First Amendment rights even when doing so is quite controversial (as in Citizens United).  But the degree to which this might aid the Tamils depends upon the success of their lawyers in persuading the Court that their activities are, indeed, ‘pure speech’ protected by the First Amendment. 


Further, the First Amendment argument might truly work for the Tamils if the Court were to take their suggestion to apply ‘strict scrutiny.’  The government, understandably, wants a more relaxed standard, and may, in fact, need that in order to prevail.


If the Court finds choosing up sides between the two basic constitutional positions too difficult, each side has offered it a narrowing interpretation of the ‘material support’ law that could provide a fallback position for the Justices.  The more benignly it might view the activities of the Americans and their domestic groups, the more likely the Court may be to require proof of a goal of advancing terrorist violence.


The Court is expected to decide the cases before recessing for the summer in late spring or early summer.




"



(Via SCOTUSblog.)

Authorizing Civilian Massacres

http://blog.newsweek.com/blogs/declassified/archive/2010/02/19/report-bush-lawyer-said-president-could-order-civilians-to-be-massacred.aspx

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Kiyemba v Obama

http://scotuswiki.com/index.php?title=Kiyemba_v._Obama

Humanitarian Law Project v. Holder

http://ccrjustice.org/holder-v-humanitarian-law-project

Friday, February 19, 2010

A new check on the Congress?

It just struck me that the president doesn't get to exert his check on the Congress (the veto) unless the bill in question is passed by both houses. Considering that the Senate is much more reactionary than the House and that it has its own tools to obstruct bills from ever getting to the president's desk, should we start thinking about providing the president with another check on the more reactionary, less representative Senate when they kill bills?

Thursday, February 18, 2010

A Riddle

What is the difference between terrorism and a man that flies his plane into an IRS building in Austin, TX?

In a desperate attempt not to call this ambush terrorism, an FAA official called it "apparently a criminal act" to deflect concerns it could have been terrorism.

I guess he didn't fit the government's profile of terrorist: foreign brown person...

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Shoot First, Ask Questions...Never

A recent WaPo article reveals that Obama's weapon of choice for dealing with high-value terrorism targets has been just that...a weapon. In lieu of capturing the target for further questions, he has erred toward killing from afar. In fact, this shift in policy has led to "dozens of targeted killings and no reports of high-value detentions." Although some may say that missiles launched from a helicopter, for instance, are sure ways of eliminating a threat (and, therefore, enhancing national security), such a tactic forfeits valuable intelligence that no corpse could give. For me, this policy is misguided from both a utilitarian and a moral point of view.

That isn't all to say that we should torture the suspect once he or she is in our custody. In fact, there are utilitarian arguments against that, too. All I'm saying is that, if we truly are in a battle of good intelligence, why wipe out the source?

Monday, February 15, 2010

Why the 'Don't ask, don't tell' policy is doomed

Recently, the Pentagon went on record in favor of repealing Don't Ask Don't Tell (DADT). Two columnists from WaPo think that this position undermines the government's assertion that allowing openly queer individuals to serve in the military would be a threat to national security. Now we finally get to call a spade a spade! We can finally assert that discrimination against gays serving in the military is unequal protection under the laws. In other words, it's violative of the 14th Amendment.

Why the 'Don't ask, don't tell' policy is doomed: "Washington Post - By David B. Rivkin Jr., Lee A. Casey - Feb. 13 (Opinion) - When the Pentagon's top brass announced last week that they no longer believe military unit cohesion suffers from the presence of openly gay men or women in the ranks, they effectively transformed a policy question into a legal one, to which the answer is clear: Congress can no longer mandate discrimination in the armed forces on the basis of sexual orientation.

NewsTrust Rating: 4.4 average (not enough reviews) - See Reviews » - Review It        Visit NewsTrust | About | Sign Up | Disclaimer

"



(Via NewsTrust - Politics - Most Recent Stories.)

Under plan, intelligence agencies would be consulted before reading of rights

Under plan, intelligence agencies would be consulted before reading of rights: "Washington Post - By Walter Pincus - Feb. 13 (News Report) - The Justice Department and the FBI will consult with the intelligence community on information about terrorist suspects arrested in the United States before deciding whether to read them their Miranda rights under a plan now under review in the White House, according to senior administration offi...

NewsTrust Rating: 3.1 average (not enough reviews) - See Review » - Review It        Visit NewsTrust | About | Sign Up | Disclaimer

"



(Via NewsTrust - Politics - Most Recent Stories.)

Saturday, February 13, 2010

Obama Is Making Plans to Use Executive Power for Action on Several Fronts

Obama Is Making Plans to Use Executive Power for Action on Several Fronts:

Although it will be painful, Obama should refuse to exert executive power in order to pass the agenda that Congress refuses to. Caving to pressure would continue the dangerous practice of undermining the checks and balances built into the Constitution. Just as bad, the bandage that he stands to create can be revoked by the next occupant of the White House is not the solution.

Friday, February 12, 2010

Quiz Time!

Which branch of the United States Government at the federal level doesn't even have one elected official? For the answer, try consulting the tags for this post!

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Filibuster: Inherently Anti-Civil Liberties?

With the recent election of Senator Scott Brown for the Class I seat from Massachusetts, many foresee the doom of "Obama's Agenda." The problem: the filibuster, which stands between the majority and effective governance.

A History Lesson
In 1806, the Senate removed a rule to stop debate and force a vote. Essentially, it got rid of the 'off' switch of debate. Ever since, the 'lightbulbs' debating bills have had to burn out on their own before any votes could be made. At first, this wasn't a problem; legislators didn't realize how much power they had until William R. King became the first senator to utilize it to 'extend debate on' (read: kill) a bill to charter the Second Bank of the United States.

So what has happened since then? The current problem started in earnest during the Wilson administration, when the president had gotten fed up with the lack of progress on critical bills to fund World War I. His solution was to add a way to stop debate if 2/3 of the senators so wished. Great idea to add a brake to the system, but why 2/3!? Over the next half-century, cloture was invoked successfully only five times when a filibuster was declared!

The Current State of Affairs
Although the necessary proportion of senators has been reduced to 3/5, the gridlock should sound familiar. While the filibuster was only used an average of once per year in the 1950's, last year it was used an astonishing 139 times.

But perhaps the filibuster is a good break on the 'tyranny of the majority.' At least it ensures that a bill has widespread support before passing, right? Sure, but it favors the minority so much that it goes beyond giving a voice to the little guy and on to leading to 'tyranny of the minority'. At its most imbalanced (i.e., the 42 senators from the 21 least populous states), Senators from seats of roughly 11% of the country's population can thwart the will of 89% of the country's representatives!

Of those 21 states, 8 haven't voted Democrat since going for LBJ in 1964 (WY, ND, AK, SD, ID, NE, UT, KS). Also, the only time Montana has voted Democrat in the last 40 years was Bill Clinton's first candidacy. Eight of the remaining twelve are either solid Republican or swing states (Repub: AR, MS; swing: NH, ME, WV, NM, NV, IA; Dem: VT, DE, RI, HI). Although voting Democrat and supporting civil liberties are NOT synonymous, such a trend suggests that the cards might be stacked against civil libertarians.

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Is Congress THE Problem?

Is Congress THE Problem?: "

Nothing Lawrence Lessig says here is false exactly. But if Congress is the problem and the problem is the money, how can there never -- in anybody's predictable articles on this topic -- be any mention of the fact that the president takes more money than any congress member, and power to do most things has been handed over by Congress to the president? How can these two points be avoided?

"



(Via Let's Try Democracy.)

Is Independent Government-Funded Media an Oxymoron?

Do We Have Freedom of the Press?: ""



(Via Let's Try Democracy.)

5 Ways Bloggers Can Use OpenCongress to Build Public Knowledge About Congress

5 Ways Bloggers Can Use OpenCongress to Build Public Knowledge About Congress: "

One of the best things about getting news online, be it on blogs or elsewhere, is that it’s so easy to take the information and dig in deeper. Since bloggers and online journalists can link to primary sources for their reporting, everyone can easily engage with the issues they care about on a deeper level.


Political engagement is what we care about the most at OpenCongress. We think it’s fundamental for fighting corruption, dysfunction and apathy in our government. That’s why we’re striving to make the best primary source information on Congress for political bloggers to use. Every page on OpenCongress gives you—


  • The best one-page summary — all the crucial official information on bills, issues, senators and reps. is available at-a-glance on a single page.

  • The ability to write your members of Congresslogin (or register) to your free ‘My OpenCongress’ account, and emailing your federal elected officials about a bill is just one click away.

  • A chance to create political networks — use our pages to coordinate actions with people that feel the same way as you on an issue. OpenCongress pages have created powerful coalitions that have affected legislation.

  • Information in context — Rather than just showing bills, senators, reps. and issues, we let you know you which ones people are paying the most attention to on the internet and which ones are ‘hot.’

Here are five ways bloggers and journalists can use OpenCongress right now to help shed more light on D.C. and give people the information they need to hold power accountable:


1) Always Give a Link When You Write About Bills


Too often, bloggers and journalists don’t give a link when they write about bills in Congress. Sometimes they don’t even tell readers exactly which bill they’re talking about. Providing a link to a bill turns a blog post into an opportunity for real political engagement because it gives your readers a chance to get involved by doing their own research and taking action. Plus, links go a long way to boost the authority and value of your posts.


We have pages for every single bill in Congress. You can find ‘hot’ bills here, and you can use the search bar in the upper right to find all other bills. Our bill pages combine official information about Congress with news and blog coverage, and the social wisdom of our users. See a sample bill page by clicking here.


As a bonus, every time you link to a bill on OpenCongress, your post will automatically show up on that bill’s OpenCongress page in the blog or news coverage feed. OpenCongress is the most popular government transparency site in the U.S., and we’ve had some reports of links on our bill pages creating a lot of traffic.


2) Link to the Exact Provision You’re Talking About


When you write about a specific provision in a bill, you can use OpenCongress to give your readers a link directly to the provision you’re talking about so they can read it in context for themselves. This way you can have the authority and trust that a primary-source link gets you, even when you’re writing about a single line of text, or a single word, within a gigantic, 1,000+ page bill.


To generate the links, just scroll over any section of legislative text on an OpenCongress bill page and a ‘permalink’ button will appear. Click the button to create a custom url that you can use to bring your readers directly to the part of the bill you are writing about.


3) Show People How Their Members of Congress Voted


Every time Congress takes a vote on a bill, amendment or nomination, OpenCongress creates a page that shows how every member of Congress voted. Linking to our roll call pages lets your readers dig down to see how their own senators and representatives voted. Then they can either email their elected officials in one click from the OpenCongress page to tell them how they feel about their vote, or remember the vote for when election time comes around.


You can find roll call pages on the ‘actions and votes’ tab of bill pages, or at our main roll call page.


We also offer the ability to link to vote position breakdowns by party, so, for example, you can easily share a link to the Democrats who voted ‘no’ on health care, or the Republicans who voted ‘aye’ on the stimulus.


4) Give an Unbiased Way to Learn About Members of Congress


People want to know who their representatives and senators actually are and what they actually stand for. But too often, that information is hidden by spin and bias. At OpenCongress, we have comprehensive, fact-based pages for every member of Congress including information on their voting history, bill sponsorship and co-sponsorship, committee assignments, biography and much more.


Members of Congress’s official pages are full of tailored information and politically-convenient statements. Wikipedia pages don’t have comprehensive information on actual bills and votes. When you write about the congresscritters, there’s no better place to link to than OpenCongress to give your readers an unbiased source to learn all about them. Our pages are built on raw data — members of Congress can’t hide from the facts we present.


5) Link to Race Pages to Build Knowledge About Candidates


As the mid-term election season ramps up, we’re providing simple pages that give you the basic facts for each Senate and House race. The 2010 RaceTracker is a non-partisan, fully-referenced, open-source and crowd-sourced wiki project tracking every congressional race, nationwide.


So, when you’re talking about Sen. Arlen Specter re-election chances, you can easily share information on his challengers from the left and the right. RaceTracker pages show you who’s a confirmed candidate, who’s considering, and who is just rumored to be running. They also show you how much money each potential candidate has raised, and give you links to get more background info about each candidate.


What resources on Congress do you want that we aren’t providing? Leave a comment on this post or email us at writeus@opencongress.org and we’ll build it if it is technically possible.


OpenCongress is a non-partisan, non-profit public resource website — we encourage you to link back to this post and share what you find here with friends and bloggers. Thanks for using OpenCongress to help build factual public knowledge about Congress.


Read all blog posts here, or subscribe to our RSS feed to keep up with what’s really happening in Congress.

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(Via Open Congress : Blog.)

Kucinich Right, Greenwald Wrong

Kucinich Right, Greenwald Wrong: "

Kucinich Right, Greenwald Wrong

By David Swanson


On Democracy Now! on Tuesday, Congressman Dennis Kucinich said he was working on a Constitutional Amendment to address both 'Citizen's United' and 'Buckley v. Valejo,' meaning the Supreme Court decisions giving corporations outrageous and destructive powers of 'free speech' and defining the spending of money as 'speech.'


read more

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(Via Let's Try Democracy.)

Sunday, January 31, 2010

Supreme Court Protects Immigrants' Right to Court Review

Supreme Court Protects Immigrants' Right to Court Review: "

The decision not only preserves federal court review as a necessary check on executive powers, but it also affirms the basic principle that immigrants are entitled to fair process.


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(Via AlterNet.org: Rights and Liberties.)

Saturday, January 30, 2010

WHAT THE HELL ABOUT THE COSTS OF OCCUPATION!

U.S. Halts Medevac Flights From Haiti: "

Military planes have been flying some wounded earthquake victims to be treated in U.S. hospitals, but that practice has stopped for now because states have raised questions about the cost of such care.

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(Via Top Stories.)

You let who edit what?!?!

Now We Impeach Jay Bybee: "

By David Swanson


No one disputes that Jay Bybee's name is at the bottom of memos that were, and to some extent still are, treated as laws which legalized aggressive war at the pleasure of a president and a variety of acts of torture. For many months the House Judiciary Committee has had two excuses for not impeaching Judge Bybee, even while proceeding with the impeachments of a judge for groping and another judge for petty corruption. The private excuse has been that impeaching Bybee would be opposed by Fox News. The public excuse has been that the Justice Department has not yet released its Office of Professional Responsibility (OPR) report on the crimes of Bybee and his former colleagues.


read more

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(Via Let's Try Democracy.)

Friday, January 29, 2010

Pew: 26% know what filibuster is. Zogby: 32% want to eliminate it.

Pew: 26% know what filibuster is. Zogby: 32% want to eliminate it.: "

The filibuster rule just isn't very popular among those who know what it is. Pew found that 26% of Americans knew how many votes were needed to get around a filibuster. Zogby reports that 32% want to get rid of that anti-democratic blockage.


And these two polls were probably looking at samples of the same population, given Zogby's findings confirming vast ignorance: Only 34% knew Republicans use the filibuster more. Only 28% knew the House represented public opinion better than the Senate.


read more

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(Via Let's Try Democracy.)

Tony Blair Forced to Testify on War Crimes

Tony Blair Forced to Testify on War Crimes: "

By David Swanson


Former prime minister Tony Blair's testimony was streamed live at 4:30 a.m. ET at the Iraq Inquiry website and on other sites, such as the UK newspaper the Telegraph which allowed viewers to rank Blair's responses on a 'Lie Meter'. Telegraph readers' top desired questions pre-hearing were:


read more

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(Via Let's Try Democracy.)

Can Bosses Do That? As It Turns Out, Yes They Can

Can Bosses Do That? As It Turns Out, Yes They Can: "

Could you be fired for having a political bumper sticker on your car — or even having a beer after work? Lewis Maltby says its more than possible — its happened. His new book, Can They Do That? details the predicaments many workers find themselves in.

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(Via Top Stories.)

Why do you always have to come up with solutions?

10 Ways to Stop Corporate Dominance of Politics: "

Its not too late to limit or reverse the impact of the Supreme Courts disastrous decision in Citizens United v. FEC. Heres how.


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(Via AlterNet.org: Rights and Liberties.)

The End of Diplomacy?

The End of Diplomacy?: "

Matt Yglesias points out that increasing partisanship in Congress makes it not just hard to pass domestic legislation, but nearly impossible to pass international treaties:



The dysfunctional nature of the United States Congress means that essentially all diplomatic intercourse with the American government is worthless. If you were at a G8 meeting talking regulation, why would you take the Obama administration’s positions seriously? Or at a Major Economies Forum meeting talking about climate change? Or at a UN Security Council meeting talking about multilateral nuclear disarmament?....If the people you’re negotiating with think that anything you oppose will face unanimous opposition from a minority with the power to block bills, while your own party isn’t even disciplined enough to provide the leadership with consistent backing on procedural issues, then what is there really to negotiate about?



It's a good point, but I think it's probably overstated. The problem with things like the filibuster and the Senate hold isn't so much that they exist, or that they're anti-majoritarian per se, but that they've become routine. That really does represent a qualitative change in the way Congress operates, and it's a change that no one, from the founders forward, ever really intended.


But for better or worse, formalizing international treaties has always been hard, and it's hard by design. So this doesn't represent any real change in how the government works. Foreign countries have always known that they're at the mercy of a very difficult ratification process if they want to conclude a formal treaty with the U.S., and it's not clear to me that minority obstruction on treaties is worse now than it's been in the past.1


What's more, it's not always as bad as it sounds. Executive agreements have become much more popular in recent years, and these can be passed with 60 votes. In that sense, passing treaties has actually become easier. Beyond that, in some cases the president can simply agree to push for harmonizing rules without a treaty in place at all. Sometimes this can be done via executive order and sometimes via riders to budget bills that are passed via reconciliation. It's not always necessary to get Congress to sign on to everything.


But an honest to God treaty? Yeah, that requires a two-thirds vote in the Senate. But it always has, and treaties have been failing for a long time because of it. Just ask Woodrow Wilson's ghost.


1Data to the contrary welcome, of course

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(Via MoJo Blogs and Articles.)

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Rep Donna Edwards Intros Constl Amendment to Undo Corporate "Free Speech"

Rep Donna Edwards Intros Constl Amendment to Undo Corporate "Free Speech": "

 


JOIN THIS CAMPAIGN!


read more

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(Via Let's Try Democracy.)

Grayson Introduces Bills to Dull SCOTUS Ruling

Grayson Introduces Bills to Dull SCOTUS Ruling: "

The newest installment in his 'Save Our Democracy' platform, firebreathing Congressman Alan Grayson introduced two new bills yesterday to dull the impact of last weeks Supreme Court decision, which determined that corporations can spend unlimited amounts of money on elections. Grayson called the 5-4 ruling the 'worst since Dred Scott.'


The first bill, patriotically titled the 'America is for Americans Act,' bans political expenditures from any corporation with foreign owners. 'Foreigners cannot vote in our elections, so they should not be allowed to spend unlimited money to buy votes either,' Grayson said in a press release. 'If we do not limit foreign influence, we will soon have the Distinguished Member from Russia or the Esteemed Senator from Saudi Arabia.'


The second bill introduced last night demands that companies 'cannot have it both ways' when it comes to 'campaign propaganda.' The 'Pick Your Poison Act' would force corporations to choose between lobbying congress to further their political agenda and supporting candidates in election years. 'If they want to use hired guns to influence lawmakers,' Grayson said, 'they need to stay out of the election process.'


Among the six bills Team Grayson says can 'Save our Democracy' are measures to implement a 500% excise tax on corporate contributions, apply antitrust laws to PACs, and require corporations to disclose SEC filings on funds used to influence public opinion.


Graysons outspoken demeanor has earned the freshman congressman the unfortunate reputation as the liberal antidote to GOP Reps. Michele Bachmann and Steve King, both prone to exaggeration and ideological grandstanding. But these measures could strike a chord among lawmakers who think the Supreme Court went too far last week by extending the free speech rights for individuals to massive corporations.


Follow Ben on Twitter. 

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"



(Via MoJo Blogs and Articles.)

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Chump Change

Chump Change: "

Craig Jennings at OMB Watch visualizes the deficit reduction we can expect to see from the plan to freeze all non-defense discretionary spending that President Obama will announce tonight:



Beyond the fact that the freeze is just a small gesture in the face of a giant, systemic problem, Jennings adds this warning:


And that Obama is merely putting a cap — and not an across-the-board freeze — on domestic discretionary spending is especially troubling, because when congressional appropriators working within this framework get down to business this summer, it will be they who decide which programs get cuts and which programs get bumps. And in Washington, those with the loudest political voice (i.e moneyed) will see their favored programs thrive, while marginalized populations who can’t afford big time lobbyists will see their programs cut.
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(Via Open Congress : Blog.)

The State of the Union speech Obama would give in a more honest world

The State of the Union speech Obama would give in a more honest world: "Washington Post - By Steven Pearlstein - Jan. 26 (Opinion) - Our union has been torn asunder by a clash of ideologies and special interests and brigades of power-hungry partisans that has resulted in a paralyzing political stalemate. In response, our citizens have become angry, cynical, distrustful and dispirited.

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"



(Via NewsTrust - Politics - Most Recent Stories.)

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

RIP: Air America

http://airamerica.com/

Sen Udall: Get rid of filibuster!!!!

Or that's pretty much where he's going with a new resolution to amend by simple majority Senate rules

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/tom-udall/its-time-for-the-constitu_b_436935.html

GRITtv: The State of the Corporate Union

GRITtv: The State of the Corporate Union: "


The State of the Union will be a little different this year. Thanks to a last-minute switch the annual address will be presented by Lloyd Blankfein, CEO and Chairman of Goldman Sachs, known henceforth as CEO of America.


read more

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(Via Truthout - Opinion.)

Kaptur resolution vs. Citizens decision

http://www.opencongress.org/bill/111-hc13/show

Resolution to Get Rid of the FILIBUSTER!!!!

H.Res.1018 Requesting the Senate to adjust its rules to reflect the intent of the framers of the Constitution by amending the Senate's filibuster rule, Rule 22, to facilitate the consideration of bills and amendments.: "Requesting the Senate to adjust its rules to reflect the intent of the framers of the Constitution by amending the Senate's filibuster rule, Rule 22, to facilitate the consideration of bills and amendments."



(Via Open Congress : Top 20 Most Viewed Bills.)

Saturday, January 23, 2010

Prop 8, The Movie

Prop 8, The Movie: "

After the U.S. Supreme Court narrowly prohibited the YouTube broadcast of the first federal trial over same-sex marriage, a group of Hollywood actors decided they'd step in and film re-enactments. Using transcripts of the day-to-day proceedings, director John Ireland writes the scripts by day, and by night he films a reenactment at a mock trial courtroom on the campus of USC. The episodes will be broadcast over the Web.

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(Via Top Stories.)

Friday, January 22, 2010

Casting Doubt on US Claims of Suicide, Attorney Scott Horton Reveals 3 Gitmo Prisoners Died After Torture at Secret Site

Casting Doubt on US Claims of Suicide, Attorney Scott Horton Reveals 3 Gitmo Prisoners Died After Torture at Secret Site: "Democracy Now - By Anjali Kamat, Scott Horton - Jan. 20 (Investigative Report) - New evidence has emerged suggesting three Guantanamo prisoners whom the U.S. claims took their own lives in June 2006 died not from suicide, but torture. A six-month investigation by Harper’s Magazine indicates the three prisoners were suffocated and tortured during questioning at a secret black site facility at Guantanamo known as 'Camp No'. The article is based in part on testimony from a former staff sergeant who says the Obama administration has refused to investigate his claims.

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"



(Via NewsTrust - Politics - Most Recent Stories.)

Keeping Same-Sex Marriage in the Dark

Keeping Same-Sex Marriage in the Dark: "

On Wednesday, a conservative majority of the Supreme Court overturned a ruling made by a federal trial judge that would have allowed limited television coverage of a trial that will decide the fate of California’s Proposition 8. The trial, which is currently proceeding in San Francisco, is one of the most significant civil rights cases of our time. The plaintiffs are seeking to overturn a ballot initiative that makes same-sex marriage illegal in California.


read more

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(Via Truthout - Opinion.)

HOPE 2.0

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/arianna-huffington/hope-has-been-a-bust-its_b_427314.html

Why did U.S. aid focus on securing Haiti rather than helping Haitians?

Why did U.S. aid focus on securing Haiti rather than helping Haitians?: "Slate
"The beginning of an answer can be found in what Rebecca Solnit, author of A Paradise Built in Hell, calls "elite panic"—the conviction of the powerful that their own Hobbesian corporate ethic is innate in all of us, that in the absence of centralized authority, only cannibalism can reign."

- By Ben Ehrenreich - Jan. 21 (Opinion) - Air-traffic control in the Haitian capital was outsourced to an Air Force base in Florida, which, not surprisingly, gave priority to its own pilots. While the military flew in troops and equipment, planes bearing supplies for the Red Cross, the World Food Program, and Doctors Without Borders were rerouted to Santo Domingo in neighboring Dominican Republic. Aid flights from Mexico, Russia, and France were refused permission to land. On Monday, the British Daily Telegraph reported, the French minister in charge of humanitarian aid admitted he had been involved in a 'scuffle' with a U.S. commander in the airport's control tower. According to the Telegraph, it took the intervention of the United Nations for the United States to agree to prioritize humanitarian flights over military deliveries.

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(Via NewsTrust - Politics - Most Recent Stories.)

Tangle Of Detainee Rules Leads To Court Confusion

Tangle Of Detainee Rules Leads To Court Confusion: "

One year after President Obama pledged to close the Guantanamo Bay prison, 200 detainees remain there. A new study finds judges using wildly different criteria to review the cases — the result of a lack of clear guidelines on issues such as the use of coercion — and how to define an enemy combatant.

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"



(Via Top Stories.)

ACLU Sues for Torture Memos Report

ACLU Sues for Torture Memos Report: "

Remember in June, when I told you the Justice Department Office of Professional Responsibility (OPR) report on the authors of the 'torture memos' was due out soon? It was going to be released in 'a matter of weeks,' Attorney General Eric Holder told a Senate committee. Then, in November, Holder told another Senate panel that the report would come out 'by the end of the month.' While, its January now, and the OPR report is nowhere to be found. The American Civil Liberties Union is tired of waiting, so today it filed a lawsuit seeking to compel the release of the report. Maybe that will finally get the Justice Department to keep its promises. Don't count on it, though.

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(Via MoJo Blogs and Articles.)

SCOTUS: Foreign Corporations Have Rights, Too!

SCOTUS: Foreign Corporations Have Rights, Too!: "

Politico's Josh Gerstein has a great story today pointing out that, in the wake of yesterdays Supreme Court decision allowing corporations to spend unlimited amounts of money on elections, theres really nothing to stop foreign companies from supporting or opposing US candidates. It would be as easy as setting up a US subsidiary and having the subsidiary spend the money. Some of Gersteins sources argue that foreign corporations would be reluctant to interfere in US politics because it could bring bad press. But that doesnt seem like much of a deterrent to the worst corporations. Do foreign corporations like Gazprom that are largely state-owned really care what the US press writes about them? Law professor Mark Kleiman has more



One aspect of the ruling that hasn’t gathered much attention: as far as I can tell, the analysis doesn’t distinguish between domestic and foreign corporations.  Not that it would matter much, since a foreign corporation can always establish a domestic subsidiary, or buy an American company:   Cities Service, for example, is a unit of PDVSA, the Venezuelan state oil company.  So the ruling allows Hugo Chavez to spend as much money as he wants to helping and harming American politicians.   If the Russian, Saudi, and Chinese governments don’t currently have appropriate vehicles for doing so, you can count on it:  they soon will.


Nor is this a problem that can be handled by 'disclosure.'  The ad on TV praising the opponent of the congressman who did something to annoy Hugo Chavez won’t say 'Paid for by Hugo Chavez.'  It will say 'Paid for by Citizens for Truth, Justice, and the American Way,' which in turn will have gotten a contribution from 'Americans for Niceness,' which in turn will have gotten a contribution from a lobbyist for a subsidiary of Cities Service that no one has ever heard of.



This week just keeps getting better.

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(Via MoJo Blogs and Articles.)

Guantanamo Panel Supports Indefinite Detention

Guantanamo Panel Supports Indefinite Detention: "

A presidential task force is recommending that 47 Guantanamo Bay detainees be held indefinitely without charge and that about three dozen inmates face trial or military commissions, according to two government officials. Such prosecutions would likely take place in the U.S.

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(Via Top Stories.)

[video] In The Know: Are Politicians Failing Our Lobbyists?

[video] In The Know: Are Politicians Failing Our Lobbyists?: "Panelists discuss the alarming trend of politicians who break their promises to the lobbyists who helped elect them.

"



(Via The Onion.)