Vote USA 2004

9
Dez
2005

Poland was main CIA gulag base

Reuters

12/09/05

Poland was the heart of the CIA's secret detention network in Europe, with bases there until recently holding a quarter of the 100 detainees estimated held in such camps worldwide, a human rights group said. Reports of the CIA operating secret jails in Poland and Romania as part of its war on terrorism have caused controversy on both sides of the Atlantic and dogged U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice's European trip this week. Both countries deny hosting such facilities, and the United States has declined to comment on the reports...

http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/L09248168.htm


Informant: Thomas L. Knapp

Iraq, the Congress, and the Truth

America wants and deserves real answers on Iraq: What is the clear definition of success? Is there a plan? How much longer and how many more lives? In short, what is the end game?

Because we in Congress are charged with overseeing the safety of our sons and daughters when the president sends them into battle, it is our responsibility, our obligation to speak out for them. This obligation has not been met. That's why I am speaking out now.

I offered a concrete plan to get our troops out of harm's way, where they have become the target. I don't expect every member of Congress to agree with my specific proposal in this debate - but I do expect them to take part in that debate, not to squash it.

I am asking you to join me in demanding a real discussion of the war in Iraq from the U.S. House of Representatives.

Tell Congress to Have an Honest Debate For the Safety of Our Troops. http://whatcounts.com/t?ctl=101B079:4092A66

For too long Congress has counted itself out of any real debate on Iraq policy. We didn't talk about troop levels, even after the White House fired General Shinseki because he complained the levels were too low. One problem we encountered was the lack of proper training for our troops; service members were placed to guard the prisons but weren't trained; consequently we had Abu Ghraib, and no action from Congress. And if you look at the casualties, they have doubled since then. It's time to change our course - we can't just sit back any longer.

I've taken a lot of trips to Iraq. When I came back from my last one, I had become convinced we were making no progress at all. This can't be Republican and Democrat. It can't be recrimination one way or the other. We have to work this thing out, and we can't let a real solution get caught in the crossfire of an understandably heated political fight.

It's time for a serious conversation, not more rhetoric.

Tell Congress to Have an Honest Debate For the Safety of Our Troops. http://whatcounts.com/t?ctl=101B079:4092A66

The past few weeks have had a lot of firsts for me. I have never sought out the spotlight, or even taken the lead in a House floor debate the way I did a few weeks ago. And I've never signed an email like this before. But I see the beginning of a debate that is long overdue, and we can't afford to let it get overtaken by talking points or the news cycle.

I'm offering this petition, which will be delivered to Speaker of the House in order to keep our Congress focused where it should have been all along. I hope you'll sign if you agree.

Tell Congress to Have an Honest Debate For the Safety of Our Troops. http://whatcounts.com/t?ctl=101B079:4092A66

Sincerely,

John Murtha
Pennsylvania's 12th District


It is very important to spread Rep. John Murtha's call for an honest debate on Iraq. Please take this opportunity to forward his message to your friends and family.

http://whatcounts.com/t?ctl=101B07B:4092A66

A Most Basic Human Right

Dec. 10 is International Human Rights Day, and one of our most basic rights—the right to freely form a union—is under attack. Watch this video to learn more.

http://www.americanrightsatwork.org/efcaflash.cfm

by American Rights At Work
http://tompaine.com/#passiton

Debating The American Crusade

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/opinion/251384_tony09.html

by Anthony B. Robinson, Seattle Post-Intelligencer

Bush sold America his global war using an old Christian heresy. Not surprisingly, it's led to a new crusade.

http://www.tompaine.com/

Fair Trade For None

by Joseph Stiglitz, TomPaine.com

Thanks to the slick maneuvering of the U.S. and other rich nations, the deck remains stacked against developing countries.

http://www.tompaine.com/articles/20051209/fair_trade_for_none.php

State Dept blocks foreign trips for Americans who speak against White House policy

http://www.unknownnews.org/0512091203whitelist.html


Informant: Mata Hari

Das amerikanische State Department verbietet allen US Amerikanern, die Kritik am White House äußern, die Ausreise

Achtung!!!!! Es wird Ernst.

09.12.20054, 18.45 Uhr

Soeben aus dem Newsticker erhalten:

Das amerikanische State Department verbietet allen US Amerikanern, die Kritik am White House äußern, die Ausreise.

Quelle: http://www.unknownnews.org/0512091203whitelist.html

Geht es jetzt richtig los????????????

Mata Hari

The U.S. isn't joining the international discussions about global warming solutions

Send an e-card to friends and tell them to email Washington
http://actionnetwork.org/ct/EpaYwHs1RmtN/

Leaders from around the world are meeting right now in Montreal to discuss international efforts to cut global warming pollution.

Unfortunately, the U.S. is not engaging in these discussions. Despite a lot of talk from Washington about global warming, the federal government has refused to take any meaningful action to cut global warming pollution.

Tell friends to email their elected officials! We need your help to get our "Enough Talk. Take Action!" message to Washington. Send an e-card to friends and help get Washington to take action on cutting global warming pollution:
http://actionnetwork.org/ct/EpaYwHs1RmtN/

Or, if you haven't acted yet, watch our animation on global warming impacts and send an email to your elected officials:
http://actionnetwork.org/EDF_Action_Network/yea_flash.html?member_key=i5sxe8425xwmjd&

In Montreal, countries are discussing the next phase of the Kyoto Protocol - the international agreement cutting global warming pollution. These are crucial discussions about long-term solutions, involving a historic effort by rainforest nations to curb deforestation.

But the U.S. is not joining in these negotiations, even though global warming's effects were all too visible in 2005.

Among the 2005 danger signs:

- The ferocity of recent hurricanes may be a sign that global warming is already intensifying tropical storms. And many scientists believe it will only get worse in the coming decades.

- Arctic sea ice melting advanced this summer, opening up the possibility of ice-free Arctic summers and dangerously accelerating global warming, as less ice leads to more heat absorption from the sun - a prospect with devastating consequences for polar bears and people alike.

- Coral reefs are bleaching and dying. These spectacular rainforests of the sea are at severe risk as warmer waters, more acidic oceans and stronger storms take their combined toll.

If we are going to stop global warming, we have to first deal with the hot air coming from our elected officials.

Send e-card to your friends and urge them to email Washington. It's time for Washington to join the fight to cut global warming pollution: http://actionnetwork.org/ct/EpaYwHs1RmtN/

Thanks for your help.

Cheney in Last Throes

Ray McGovern writes that Vice President Dick Cheney, whose unbridled chutzpah has led him to take public as well as private credit for being the intellectual author of US policy on torture, has become such a glaring liability that his tenure may be short-lived. There is a growing possibility that the vice president will resign at the turn of the year "for reasons of health," and that his partner-in-crime - in what Colin Powell's former chief of staff at the State Department, Col. Lawrence Wilkerson, has labeled the "Cheney-Rumsfeld cabal" - will choose to retire to his home in Taos early next year.

http://www.truthout.org/docs_2005/120905Z.shtml

Feingold to Fight Patriot Act Reauthorization

Feingold Threatens Filibuster on Patriot Act Report

Feingold writes that he will do everything he can, including a filibuster, to stop this Patriot Act conference report, which does not include adequate safeguards to protect our constitutional freedoms.

http://www.truthout.org/docs_2005/120805A.shtml

--------

Feingold to Fight Patriot Act Reauthorization

John Nichols Fri Dec 9, 1:40 PM ET

The Nation -- Four years ago, when U.S. Senator Russ Feingold stood alone in the Senate to oppose the Bush administration's Patriot Act, he was portrayed as a political fringe dweller whose determination to defend basic liberties was out of touch with the realities of the post-9/11 era.

This year, as Feingold leads the fight to block a flawed proposal to reauthorize the Patriot Act, he does so as the voice of a national movement that includes conservatives and liberals, Democrats, Republicans, Greens, Libertarians and independents, and residents of all 50 states and the District of Columbia. And he has enough Senate allies to speak seriously about launching a filibuster to block the measure.

What has changed since 2001?

For one thing, almost 400 communities across the United States and seven states -- Alaska, Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, Maine, Montana and Vermont -- have passed resolutions condemning the assaults on civil liberties and the rule of law contained in the Patriot Act and calling upon Congress to address those concerns before reauthorizing the measure that was approved with minimal debate in the aftermath of the September 11, 2001, attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.

Rarely in American history has a single law drawn such ideologically, politically and geographically diverse opposition.

The message was heard by the Senate which, during this year's reauthorization debate, addressed many of the most serious civil liberties concerns. The bipartisan reauthorization measure, which added basic privacy protections that had been proposed by Feingold and others, was approved unanimously by the Senate.

Unfortunately, the U.S. House, which under the hard-line partisan leadership of Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Illinois, and his lieutenants no longer operates as an independent legislative chamber but instead rubber stamps the requests of the Bush administration, failed to respond to the public outcry. Instead, it produced a reauthorization of the Patriot Act that was actually more draconian in some senses than the original legislation.

That set up what was supposed to be a clash between House and Senate conferees, who were required to reconcile the differing proposals.

But, rather than accept the Senate's balanced bill, the conference committee opted to advance a version of the legislation that, like the House bill, extends most of the Patriot Act permanently while failing to address the flaws that have inspired so much opposition to the law. Of particular concern to civil libertarians is the fact that the conference committee's proposal extends several of the Patriot Act's most controversial provisions by authorizing roving wiretaps and permitting allowing the government to seize the records of libraries, hospitals and businesses in "fishing expedition" searches.

"The conference committee had the opportunity to fix many of the provisions of the Patriot Act to which Americans across the political spectrum have voiced their opposition over the last four years," explained U.S. Sen. Russ Feingold (news, bio, voting record), D- Wisconsin, the leading Congressional critic of the Patriot Act. "Unfortunately, they decided not to listen."

Feingold's objections were echoed by the American Civil Liberties Union and other groups that seek to defend Bill of Rights protections. "This sham compromise agreement fails to address the primary substantive concern raised by millions of Americans, as well as civil liberties, privacy and business organizations and lawmakers from both sides of the aisle and in both chambers," argued Caroline Fredrickson, the director of the ACLU's Washington legislative office.

The Bill of Rights Defense Committee, which has played a critical role in organizing opposition to the Patriot Act nationwide, is particularly worried by the decision of the conference committee to disregard language that would have protected against the abusive use of so-called "National Security Letters" -- the documents used to federal agents to demand the records of libraries and businesses. Civil libertarians wants Congress to set a baseline standard requiring that there be a connection between records sought and a suspected terrorist or foreign agent.

Without such protections, Feingold says, the conference committee's proposal lacks "adequate safeguards to protect our constitutional freedoms."

As such, the Wisconsin Democrat says, "I will do everything I can, including a filibuster, to stop this Patriot Act conference report." The filibuster threat is a significant one, as the act will expire if it is not reauthorized by the end of the year.

Unlike in 2001, Feingold has Senate allies. On Thursday, a bipartisan group of senators joined him in signing a letter that declared, "We believe that this conference report will not be able to get through the Senate, while the Senate bill would easily pass the House if its leadership would bring it to a vote. We call on our House colleagues to reject this conference report, and to take up and pass the Senate compromise bill. We still can - and must - make sure that our laws give law enforcement agents the tools they need while providing safeguards to protect the constitutional rights of all Americans."

That's the balance that Feingold sought to strike in 2001. He's doing so again in 2005. The difference is that, this time, Feingold will not have to stand alone.

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