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The Dark Side: Jane Mayer on How the War on Terror Turned into a War on American Ideals

By Eric Umansky, ProPublica. Posted July 17, 2008.


The investigative reporter who connected the dots on detention, rendition and torture, discusses her new book, The Dark Side.
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As much as any other reporter, The New Yorker's Jane Mayer has helped expose the post-9/11 system of detention, rendition and abuse of 'enemy combatants.' Her book out today, The Dark Side, significantly expands on her reporting. We talked to Mayer about how the move to the system started with bureaucratic bungling and the curiously passive role of President Bush, who kept "disappearing from the frame."

Editor's Note: Umansky's reporting is briefly cited in the book.

Before you even get to torture, you suggest that the move to a more aggressive war paradigm was ill-considered. A lot of the mistakes before 9/11 weren't about being insufficiently aggressive you suggest but were just the result of bureaucratic bungling.
One of the things that struck me in talking from interviewing lots of people involved in the war on terror is that we weren't hit by al-Qaida on September 11, 2001 because we had been unable to torture people before. That wasn't the problem. When you look closely at the record, it wasn't that the laws were inadequate. In fact, the U.S. did amazingly well prosecuting terrorists as criminals. And the FBI did pretty well in keeping on top of the expanding al-Qaida's operations.

What went wrong was both simple and complex: First, there was ordinary incompetence. Most importantly, the CIA forgot to tell the FBI that two al-Qaida suspects had entered America more than a year before 9/11. They just dropped the ball.

And complicating things was a lack of political will. At the White House, arguments went round and round about whether to use lethal force against al-Qaida. Nobody really wanted to step up to it and so nobody really did.
One thing that has always struck me -- putting aside for a moment the treatment of enemy combatants -- was the near-total lack of process in deciding who was one.
That was huge. Some of these things were just amateur mistakes. And it sprang from when they threw out the Geneva Conventions, which includes a process for screening POWs, so you can figure out who's truly an enemy and who's just an innocent bystander. When they got rid of the Geneva Conventions they threw out the screening process -- Article 5 hearings. And when they stopped screening, inevitably, they made a lot of mistakes.
You pointed to the irony that the administration was focused on expanding presidential power when in fact a lot of these decisions weren't emanating from there…
It is an irony. The big argument being made by the vice president, his lawyer, David Addington, and the Justice Department was that the commander-and-chief needed almost unfettered powers to win the war on terror. And yet when you really examine the record, it's frequently not the president who's making many of these calls; it's the vice president.

The president, it's funny, I asked a lot of questions about him when I was doing interviews, and he keeps disappearing from the frame of the picture. He is described as distracted by one of the people who briefed him. Colin Powell tells a friend who I interviewed he sees the president not as being stupid but as being too easily manipulated by Cheney, who knew how to push him around.
You write that after the Supreme Court's Hamdan decision in 2006 -- which said detainees were covered by portions of the Geneva Conventions -- the president initially appeared to be against proposing legislation to overturn the decision.
Yes, he actually makes the call against Cheney and Addington at that point -- after having been lobbied Condoleezza Rice and Karen Hughes. In this case , when he did get all the facts, he decided against Cheney and Addington. And that was pretty unusual from what I could see.
And yet, then the Military Commissions Act happened -- Congress did overturn the Court's decision.
Yes, then the MCA happens. Also, when the president gives his speech about closing down the CIA's black sites, rather than it becoming a means of criticizing those policies [as Mayer writes an initial draft reflected], the vice president finds a way to convince him to keep the black sites open at least in theory.
Talk a bit about the challenges of doing all this reporting when there have been so few prosecutions and such little congressional inquiry.
That's true, though there are beginning to finally be stirrings in Congress. Carl Levin's office did an 18-month investigation that released some really interesting documents recently. Without a subpoena reporters are left to beg. I've done a lot of begging over the last few years.

Luckily there are a number of people inside the administration, certainly within the military and FBI who were upset enough about of some of these policies that they felt it was important to get word out.

I'm not sure people realized how much of a fight it was inside the government. I mean, we had [former administration lawyer] Jack Goldsmith's book, and [former Deputy Attorney General] James Comey's testimony about the NSA wiretapping -- which was one of the most amazing things I've ever heard. But what I tried to do was connect the dots. And tell more about the struggle -- how it went from a fight over America's security to a fight over its soul.
You write about a CIA official going down to Gitmo in 2002 and concluding that many of the prisoners were innocent; it's been one of the things pegged as news. And yet reports of that have been bouncing around for a long time. I wonder if that's because the detainee and torture story keeps coming out in bits and parts, and so we forget …
You're wondering whether the same news keeps getting recycled. You know, part of the challenge to me was to take a lot of the reporting that has been out there -- and there's been some fantastic reporting on this whole area. The stories have broken out of order, so it's hard to make sense out of the whole narrative because you learn fragments of it here and fragments of it there. What I was trying to tell in the book was the story from start to finish, as best as I could.

If you put it in order it somehow has more impact, because people begin to understand it better. I also think the country was kind of in a numb state and resistant to thinking about this for a long time. The zeitgeist has changed a bit and there's a bit more openness toward being critical. So now I think people are thinking about it freshly again, even though some of the material has been out there before.

I've been covering this for three years. And I didn't understand a lot until I put it all together. I really truly didn't understand, for example, the relationship between things happening in Washington and for instance, the interrogation of Manadel Al-Jamadi in Iraq. That there was a fight in Washington over what standards could be used for his interrogation and whether the Geneva Conventions applied in Iraq.

When the CIA interrogated him to death, basically, it all took place within a vortex of legal confusion -- with the CIA crying in Iraq for legal guidance, asking for a lawyer. Only when you put all the pieces together do you really begin to understand the story.

For instance, I hadn't realized that Special Forces had handled the early part of the interrogation, then he was handed over to the CIA, then he dies in their hands -- at Abu Ghraib. And then that picture of him -- the famous "iceman" photo -- that is part of the packet of shots from Abu Ghraib that come out and startle the world. There's this whole connection between all of these events that's really hard to see until you try to tell it as a story.

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See more stories tagged with: cia, torture, dick cheney, war on terror, geneva conventions, guantanamo, abu ghraib, fbi, george w. bush, condoleezza rice, new yorker, salim hamdan, david addington, jane mayer, the dark side, karen hughes

Eric Umansky is a senior writer for ProPublica.

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The judgement of history
Posted by: Tom Degan on Jul 17, 2008 12:47 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Assuming they don't attempt to suspend the
Constitution (and don't think fo a minute these assholes aren't considering it) George W. Bush, Richard B. Cheney and the entire cast of this poorly scripted, extremely dark comedy will soon be gone. Very shortly, most of the characters in this hedeous farce will be retiring to their gated communities in the Washington suburbs - lounging on their decks and looking out on the manicured lawns that are kept up an landscaped by low-paid, overworked Mexican laborers. The majority of them will make an attempt to cash in on their years as players in the Bush White House, writing their memoirs, desperately trying to whitewash their respective roles within the most criminally incompetent, murderously corrupt administration in the history of human stupidity.

Ultimately they will be unable to escape the utter contempt of their heirs. It's a sure bet that Jenna and Barbara Bush's yet-to-be-born children will spend their entire lives disassociating themselves from and denying their relationship to their infamous grandfather. I know what I'm talking about here. I am related to Roger B. Taney, the Supreme Court Justice who in 1857 wrote the Dred Scott decision - the worst, most inexcusable legal opinion ever concocted in the Halls of Justice. I only mention this because it is a part of my heritage that cannot be denied. Of this you may be absolutely certain: I certainly don't go around bragging about it.

It there is one thing that two-hundred years of the American experiment has taught us, it is that one cannot escape the judgement of history. Posterity's glare is a harsh one indeed.

Tom Degan
Goshen, NY
The Arrogance of Being Karl

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» RE: The judgement of history Posted by: CosmoViking
» The judgement of history? Posted by: Last Chance
Again,
Posted by: weathered on Jul 17, 2008 2:59 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
'show me who you walk with and I'll tell you what you are..'

Free us from the toxic, manipulating deceit that is Israel.

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Opinions Vary
Posted by: ProgressiveManiac on Jul 17, 2008 5:49 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What went wrong was both simple and complex: First, there was ordinary incompetence. Most importantly, the CIA forgot to tell the FBI that two al-Qaida suspects had entered America more than a year before 9/11. They just dropped the ball.

It is interesting that many people seem to disagree with this assessment.

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» the CIA knew Posted by: quakergirl
» RE: the CIA inside the CIA knew Posted by: Last Chance
» RE: the CIA knew Posted by: Dboy
quakergirl
Posted by: quakergirl on Jul 17, 2008 6:00 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The "war on terror" was INTENDED to be a war on the American rights and people. It was an inside job developed by international bankers and traitors in the Pentagon and carried out during War games carried out by NORAD and NATO on 9-11. red team Canada took part in deceiving the American team. Because the 4th plane had been 41 minutes late, it gave the blue American team time to realize they had been deceived by the Canadian team and that the games had turned real. The Happy Hooligans shot down the plane drone over Shankesville. The drone had been exchanged for the original plane.

A missile hit the Pentagon and Cheney knew full well it was on its way- as Norm Maneta testified in the Senate. Inside the Pentagon wing which was hit were the records of the missing trillions from the Pentagon Pension fund as well as the workers working on the missing trillions.

The war on drugs is a war on the American people too and brings more and more prisoners into the system to the benefit of the privately held money making KBR prison system. Wake up before it is too late. Our leaders dont work for us. These international bankers and the privately owned bank the Federal Reserve are out to destroy the middle class and to bring our great country to its knees so they can manage us. That includes making the dollar worthless in a soft landing.

Why are they militarizing the police?
What are they building FEMA camps?
Why are they targeting the American people and saying there are 1 million "homegrown blue eyed" terrorist "sleepers"? (We all know that is absurd.)
Why does London have 4 million cameras?
Why did they destroy our industrial base and replace it to an extent with service? They wanted to take out strength in industry away.
Why is wall street engaged in subprime fraud? (to rob the American people)

Think about it my friends...our core is rotten and taken over by bandits of the international type and traitors of the American type.

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» RE: quakergirl Posted by: Last Chance
» RE: quakergirl Posted by: opmoc
» Certainly a black bag operation Posted by: Last Chance
» Right on, quakergirl Posted by: Pirate1
» What vision was that? Posted by: Last Chance
"One of the things that struck me...
Posted by: Centavo on Jul 17, 2008 6:10 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...in talking from interviewing lots of people involved in the war on terror is that we weren't hit by al-Qaida on September 11, 2001 because we had been unable to torture people before...

What went wrong was both simple and complex: First, there was ordinary incompetence. Most importantly, the CIA forgot to tell the FBI that two al-Qaida suspects had entered America more than a year before 9/11. They just dropped the ball."

Eric Umansky

--------------

Wittingly or unwittingly, people from all walks of life --and at all levels of society, become propagandists, just as they are propagandized. Jaques Ellul in his classic work, Propaganda, calls this horizontal propaganda. Ironically, the most literate and most well educated among us, are the most susceptible to it, as well as its biggest contributors.

In this article, Umansky --who I am sure is a fine and intelligent person, is a propagandist for administration propaganda solely designed to whitewash responsibility for 9/11, the cornerstone laid many years before, for all that has come since that infamous date. With multiple facets to its being, here we see the whitewash revolving around 'The Incompetence Defense.' It is an overarching excuse that is continually referred to, and monumentally misleading. But that is its purpose.

In my view, the acceptance of this explanation is representative of the extreme denial our society resorts to in an an effort to protect ourselves from facing what needs to be faced, if we are ever to correct the corrosive trajectory of this American society. The corruption and betrayal of what we THINK this country is all about is far deeper than most can possibly imagine. There are those too who know exactly what they are doing in perpetrating this fraud, and do so without a twinge to their conscience. They, and they alone are the personification of evil.

There is no doubt in my mind whatsoever that the principals behind 9/11 are here, in these United States, walking among us.

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» Absolutely corrrect Posted by: edgeofnowhere
White washing the crimes of the Empire
Posted by: Ydotheyhateus on Jul 17, 2008 6:20 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The analysis in this article is nothing more than a whitewash of the US crimes, guised in a fancy "except for a few bad apples like Cheney".

History shows this "few bad apples" theory is wrong when applies to US.

US policy has been to maintain its hegemony over the world resources, and only if one looks at the US foreign policy from this perspective that things make sense:

1. From the begining US relied on the doctrine of Manifest Destiny over native Americans to steadily grab more land and break treaties. US also used teh doctrine of Manifest Destiny to wage war against Maxico and steal 1/3 of the territory.

2. Corporate interests such as those of teh sugar and fruits companies like Dole were behind the repeated intervention by US in South America as well as Hawaii. This policy gave rise to a new term: "Banana Republics"

3. US intervention at the behest of the oil comapnies go back to the FDR meeting with Saudi monarch. The coup against Mossadeq in Iran in '53 was set in motion at teh behest of the oil companies.

US committed horrible atrocities in achieving all these goals. Cheney happens to be a natural progeny of the past US administrations. He seeks to maintain US hegemony over the world.

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What strikes me in all this is the inability of any press person to detect lies.
Posted by: Nightstallion on Jul 17, 2008 6:57 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How the CIA created Osama bin Laden


19 September 2001
BY NORM DIXON

“Throughout the world ... its agents, client states and satellites are on the defensive — on the moral defensive, the intellectual defensive, and the political and economic defensive. Freedom movements arise and assert themselves. They're doing so on almost every continent populated by man — in the hills of Afghanistan, in Angola, in Kampuchea, in Central America ... [They are] freedom fighters.”

Norm Dixon, whatta guy! If you want it five decades late and ten billion dollars short he's the one. These reports of dixons are all true! However, like the author of the book and this article about the book they all evade and avoid the essential.

The American People created nothing! A few rogue agencies and individuals within these agencies are responsible for what has happened in this whole war on terror cut from whole cloth, which is woven from a tissue of lies and bullshit that the spin doctors ad misericordium have been collecting for fifty plus years of falsified documentation and ass covering.

Again I plead: WAKE THE F--- UP PEOPLE AND SMELL THE MALE BOVINE EXCREMENT!!! The CIA is the one continuous sinner in all this information laundering, it should be disbanned, shut down, the agents retired to Guantanimo Bay for a long vacation of the kind of shit they seem to recommend dishing out to everyone else guilty or innocent. Innocence according to them being non existant, we should for that statement alone give them all their own medicine.

The answer to not supporting terrorism is to: NOT SUPPORT IT! This means no CIA, no ATF, no FBI, no TAX money to give to this wrong headed approach to CONTROL. One would think that A CONSERVATIVE would conserve on EVERYTHING especially their own pocket books to pay for all this crap that in the end furthers only an elite few who are CONSERVATIVE OF NOTHING especially INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS!

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THIS ONLY HAPPENS IN OTHER COUNTRIES, RIGHT?
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Jul 17, 2008 7:08 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
People fear & mistrust their goverment and eventually each other. We hope for the downfall of those in charge and resent their presence in every nook & cranny of our lives. Even leisure time is spent in the shadow of news & being reminded of what's illegal today that was OK yesterday. Basic needs become unaffordable, our kids become government property. War becomes acceptable to many. I have to go to an art gallery to see a legitimate movie about Iraq. I's not some 3rd world country. It's NJ in the USA. It sure is gettint dark. Thanks, ANNA

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If she is so smart, how come
Posted by: edgeofnowhere on Jul 17, 2008 7:18 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
she is still giving credence to the "incompetence" theory? How can you write a cogent critique of the (mis)administration's jiggering of laws to suit their own ends and still TOTALLY IGNORE the act from which the whole thing started? Why is it so hard for these people to confront the fact that 9/11 was an internal operation planned and executed by a gang of neocon/military/industrial thugs bent on subverting the constitution and creating a war-driven empire? We're razor close to a military police state and people still think that 19 "Al Queda" patsies with boxcutters pulled off the job. Unbelievable!

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» Unbelievable? Posted by: Last Chance
» RE: Unbelievable? Posted by: Quannah
» RE: Unbelievable? Posted by: Last Chance
» RE: Unbelievable? Posted by: opmoc
» RE: Unbelievable? Posted by: Quannah
Yeah Right
Posted by: GreyFoxThree on Jul 17, 2008 7:21 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
LOL, The US has become a Police State and the Sheeple have been totally White washed by Dictator Bush and his Regime! All Dictator Bush cares about is Global Domination! Period!

JT
Ultimate Anonymity

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So What!
Posted by: thehousedog on Jul 17, 2008 7:35 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Wow - Now we really know again! and again! and again!

What does anybody do about this? How angered do we get as Americans that this is happening to us that we continually sit back and watch it get worse - like FISA just the other week?

We continue to be sheep led to the slaughter by our elected officials who give us up over and over again.

We are in need of a new American revolution - now - and if not now - when? Also a war crimes tribunal where Bush & Co., are condemned and prosecuted.

Yeah, right - like any of that will ever happen. So long America - was nice knowing you!

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Would this article fit in well here or not?
Posted by: reelectnoone on Jul 17, 2008 7:47 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Too Few Patriouts?

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First of all, the phrase "war on terror" is an oxymoron.
Posted by: maxpayne on Jul 17, 2008 8:21 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You cannot win a war on terror because war creates terror. That said, the rest of the article shouldn't be a surprise whatsoever unless one refused to acknowledge what was coming to them. And why again are the Democrats caving in to the GOP despite their "majority" status? Hint: On foreign policy, it has been crystal clear the past few decades that there isn't a dimes worth of a difference between the Dems or Reps.

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Through the Looking Glass Award
Posted by: D. Shenary on Jul 17, 2008 9:02 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There appears to be very little support for the concept that places bureaucratic bungling as the underlying cause of 9/11. This concept was the major finding of the 9/11 Commission Report. The responding comments to this article are clearly rejecting that argument. Why is it that we the people are content with labeling our intelligence and military élites as incompetent but never treacherous and deceitful? Of coarse, only a few of them are treacherous and deceitful, just enough moles in there to get the job done and done with a plausible cover story. The official 9/11 story wins the “through the looking glass award” for this decade with incompetence as the cover.

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Next Invasion: Pakistan, a Nuclear Power
Posted by: JackieGiles on Jul 17, 2008 10:16 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Now even Obama is talking about a course that will take us to another invasion of a sovreign country. There is NO PROOF, that Bin Laden is in Pakistan, or that, if he is moving back and forth across the Afghan/Pakistan border, the Pakistani government is complicit.

Pakistan is a nuclear power. If we invade Pakistan, or disregard their borders in the search for Bin Laden, what will be their response? Is finding Bin Laden worth the risk of turning Pakistan, our "ally at least in name" into Iraq-with-Nukes? No "cakewalk", that!

If Bin Laden is killed or captured,or tried and then killed, or imprisoned for life, he will be a martyr, and other wannabe martyrs will be stomping on each others' faces trying to take his place as Most Wanted by America.

Getting Bin Laden will not kill Al Qaeda, it will strengthen it.

Think, Barack, think!!

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» Osama bin Laden praised 9/11 Posted by: Last Chance
» RE: Osama bin Laden praised 9/11 Posted by: richholland
The treasonous Bush administration
Posted by: HughScott on Jul 17, 2008 11:23 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In Chapter 6 of my 2004 book, George Dub-ya Bush, THE PHONY FIGHTER PILOT, I wrote the following:

I haven’t always disrespected President Bush. Quite the contrary, after September 11, 2001, I became one of his biggest fans. He made me proud to be an American.

Because of George W.’s soul-stirring leadership (who could forget his bullhorn speech to firefighters and cops at the smoldering Twin Tower site?), I flew a small Stars & Stripes on my car antennae, hung a bigger flag on my house and displayed a “United We Stand” poster in the front room window.

When we attacked Afghanistan, I was an enthusiastic Bush cheerleader and couldn’t wait to see Osama bin Laden get the justice he deserved. Then something odd happened.

Instead of capturing the evildoer, cleaning up Afghanistan, hunting down Al Qaeda, concentrating on homeland security and rebuilding our economy, the president and his advisors began a steady drumbeat about the immediate danger posed by Iraq.

We all know what has occurred since -- nothing good! Simply put, as Scott McCellan asserted recently in What Happened, George W. and his neocon cabal never governed America. Instead, with Karl Svengali Rove pulling the strings, they continued a campaign of word-spinning, deceptions and outright lies that started in 1999, when Bush first ran for the White House. One of my biggest Republican heroes, Barry Goldwater, had a name for behavior like that. It's called TREASON.

For the truth about Herr Busch and his goose-stepping goons, visit my nonprofit Web site,
www.FreedomCentralUSA.com

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Is there anybody out there
Posted by: willymack on Jul 17, 2008 11:37 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Besides the limbaugh/hannity besotted numbskulls who STILL seriously believe that 911, Iraq and Afghanistan, attacks on our social programs, our enviornment, our public education systems grand theft fom our former middle class and transfer of their wealth to those already wealthy would have occured if the 2000 "election" hadn't been stolen from Gore? Is there STILL anyone who doubts the bush gang is a collection of liars, thugs, and robber barons, not to mention, traitors? Is there anyone (besides Dennis Kucinich) with the courage to speak the truth to evil and begin the process of administering JUSTICE to the bushies? It doesn't seem so, now, does it?

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» RE: Is there anybody out there Posted by: Last Chance
Federalist Society is greater threat than al-Qaeda could ever be..to our Republic...
Posted by: TJColatrella on Jul 17, 2008 12:17 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
All these evils can be traced right back to the vile usurpers of the Federalist Society and it's influence and infestation of our government and it's Unitary Executive otherwise Dictatorship Agenda..!

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What's the difference?
Posted by: ShrubtheWarcriminal on Jul 17, 2008 12:45 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Colin Powell tells a friend who I interviewed he sees the president not as being stupid but as being too easily manipulated by Cheney, who knew how to push him around."

What's the difference?

This man is not only VERY dumb, but what is worse, an even bigger sociopath.

If he et al are not tried for crimes against this country and the world (war crimes) then you can kiss this country good by.

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BillyJack would have a field day with this dumb excreata!
Posted by: Nightstallion on Jul 17, 2008 2:34 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Might does not make right, never did never will. One must stop being afraid to think and look at the facts yourself. Stop going to the fox to learn about why the hen house was attacked. The United States Government is not the culprit but, the United States Governance and the body politic is!.

STOP LOOKING FOR SIMPLE SOLUTIONS TO COMPLEX PROBLEMS; IT JUST PISSES THE SERIOUS FOLK OFF!
Learn to read the dictionary and stop parroting buzz words as if they mean something rock solid. Read the disclaimers and understand why it is necessary to fool the public! Don’t you people get “Civics” in the classroom anymore? I mean I realize I am old but . . . . . good Lord! Ignorance is not bliss, it makes one sound a fool and lets others know you have come to a battle of wits unarmed!
Learn what Theory means, seriously it is a good word! Main Entry:
the•o•ry
Pronunciation:
ˈthē-ə-rē, ˈthir-ē
Function:
noun
Inflected Form(s):
plural the•o•ries
Etymology:
Late Latin theoria, from Greek theōria, from theōrein
Date:
1592
1: the analysis of a set of facts in their relation to one another.
Now I realize that it may be foreign to some but not all theories need to be speculated upon singularly.
And also much of what government shills are calling Theories are indeed established proven fact. This means however we MUST BE RECEPTIVE TO NEW FACTS! Sadly most of us are not. Lately Government shills have taken to using Conspiracy Theory as a trigger phrase to indicate faulty thinking. By the same reasoning a Base Ball Series playoff is a Conspiracy Theory and I hate to tell some of you folks: Think is not spelled with an “M”
Conspiracies do exist: >
Main Entry:
con•spir•a•cy
Pronunciation:
kən-ˈspir-ə-sē
Function:
noun
Inflected Form(s):
plural con•spir•a•cies
Etymology:
Middle English conspiracie, from Latin conspirare
Date:
14th century
1: the act of conspiring together2 a: an agreement among conspirators b: a group of conspirators
synonyms see PLOT
A war plan is a Plot, A building plan is a Plot since more than one person usually must agree on an Idea it is by definition a conspiracy.
AND DIFFERENCES IN OPPINION ON HOW THIS SHOULD BE ACCOMPLISHED IS A CONSPIRACY THEORY Just as more than one set of these are Conspiracy Theories! Please folks consider a cranial removal from the Orifice of the fundament here. I had it done forcibly during the Viet Nam Era. Consequently I am really hard to fool these days.
Yes your Government plots against you! On a daily even hourly basis! Control is the name of the game; learn to Identify it before it is used to kill you and your children. If you think this is male bovine excrement, have fun picking up the pieces after this frigging war has kicked this country’s ass. Personally I dislike arrogance, even in me. Unfortunately I see no way to get the point across that this people (Us, We) are being manipulated. Even more unfortunately by NAZI’s and I fucking HATE NAZI fascist bastards!

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one nation under surveillance
Posted by: particle61 on Jul 17, 2008 3:06 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
redstateupdate.net has followed the dismantling of the constitution since 2005 with both humor and prescience- see stories from this week's edition...

-Democratic Support for Constitutional Protections All Tapped Out

-Terrorism Watchers All Wound Up

-Obstruction Can't Conceal Executive Contempt For Congress

redstateupdate.net
funny, frightening, free and it's all true,

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ijackers were reals but Cheney hijacked the Constitution
Posted by: whealeydj on Jul 17, 2008 3:47 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I beleive th Bush Cheney regime is filled with incompetent arrogant ideologues who lean toward tyranny. Nevertheless, I tend to beleive the hijackers crashed the planes and caused the deaths not Israelis or US covert agencies. real problem is the counter terrorism excesses of Cheney cabal who have thrown out American values of humaneness and rule of law for torture, wiretapping, cronyism (enriching their buddies) etc. they are liars and tyrants and crooks taking advantage of 9-11 and the military judicial coup which installed them to keep and expand power of authoritarian Republicism. I doubt their comptence to pull off 9-11

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The Prosecution of George W. Bush for Murder--Repost
Posted by: COC on Jul 18, 2008 6:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
by Vincent Bugliosi, the Charles Manson prosecutor. Mr. Bugliosi makes the case and he should know, having never lost a murder trial while an LA prosecutor. Yet, I've not seen the book discussed on Alternet and it seems to be virtually ignored by the media.

So, people, get it, read it, move it to the top of the best seller list where it can't be ignored.

Disclaimer: I am not related to or even know Mr. Vincent Bugliosi and have no interest in any money derived from the sale of his book.

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engineered a long time back
Posted by: Zuma on Jul 18, 2008 8:50 AM   
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dick marcinko said in his rogue warrior books back in 90s or 80s that we'd be fighting not communists but terrorists in the future. i wish i knew which of his books that was in and could quote it verbatim. i wonder if he regrets that early candor for how revealing it may be how engineered all this is...
seems to me he was almost bragging on being inside some military culture loop...

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War on Terror?...
Posted by: Bearzerker on Jul 18, 2008 4:45 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
... you can't declare war on a concept!

that was the first thing that tweaked my interest when "WAR" was declared... I thought to myself... on who... what nation is deserving of such final diplomatic discourse!

so much hypocrisy and out right lies and criminal contempt at international levels
that the dues are comen payable... and soon!

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