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U.S. Goverment Responds to EFF's Indymedia Motion

bergwitz writes "In a response to EFF's motion to unseal, the U.S. government claims that Indymedia hard drives were seized as part of an international "criminal terrorism investigation," and thus the U.S. District Court's gag order should be upheld." This will help refresh your memory.

43 of 474 comments (clear)

  1. Translation: by Ph33r+th3+g(O)at · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It'd be rather embarrasing to admit we clamped down on a leftie news site just for political reasons.

    --
    I too have felt the cold finger of injustice.
    1. Re:Translation: by Sylver+Dragon · · Score: 5, Funny

      You're viewing this all wrong. Those leftie news people are terrorists. They are questioning the One True Government. Attempting to report anything negative about the current government and/or administration undermines the authority of the government, and makes it harder to protect you from terrorists. If the government didn't clamp down on these people many True Americans might die, and the terrorists would have won.

      --
      Necessity is the mother of invention.
      Laziness is the father.
    2. Re:Translation: by Rei · · Score: 4, Informative

      > Honestly, has CNN ever said anything good
      > about Bush?

      Well, the headlining article is about Bush, so lets pull it up, shall we?

      http://www.cnn.com/2004/ALLPOLITICS/11/10/bush.c ab inet/index.html

      Why, wouldn't you know it - it's a big long piece of praise for Bush's appointment for Attorney General, consistantly calling him a "moderate". Of course, this ignores Gonzales's heavy hand in the Patriot Act, secret trials, tribunals, et al.

      Not good enough? Lets take a FAIR look:
      http://www.fair.org/activism/cnn-psyops.htm l (government PSYOPS agents working at CNN)

      http://www.fair.org/activism/cnn-aljazeera.html (CNN to Al-Jazeera: Don't report civilian deaths)

      http://www.fair.org/activism/cnn-casualties.html (CNN says that a focus on civilian casualties would be "perverse")

      http://www.fair.org/activism/dobbs-annan.html (CNN attacks Annan for saying that the Iraq war was illegal, something that most international law scholars agree with)

      http://www.fair.org/extra/0303/reliability.html (probably one of the more telling - they covered Reliable Sources for 1 year. The results? Media insiders were 76%. Right-leaning guests outnumbered left-leaning guests 2:1. Laura Ingraham came on almost as half as often as all left-leaning guests put together. White guests were 194 to 9, worse than Fox's Special Report. Male guests outnumbered female 155 to 48 (over 3 to 1). Not a single public interest group appeared during the entire year.)

      http://www.fair.org/reports/fox-cnn-guest-list.h tm l
      (Comparing Fox's "Special Report" to CNN's "Wolf Blitzer Reports" - CNN had 38 Republicans and 29 Democrats; Fox had only *6* Democrats)

      I could keep going with dozens more. CNN is slightly right of center from a US perspective, which makes it solidly to the right on a global scale. In fact, it's interesting to compare CNN's coverage with CNN International. To market to an international audience, they had to make their right-wing coverage more liberal - so, while the US CNN showed the toppling of Saddam's statue all day with a waving red, white, and blue background, CNNi showed a split screen: on one side, the statue falling. On the other, images of the Iraqi wounded and dead, including Ali Ismaeel Abbas.

      (BTW, if anyone wants to attack this, you can't get away with just attacking FAIR: you need to attack *the content*).

      --
      That's it, Mr. Giraffe, get all the marmalade.
    3. Re:Translation: by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 4, Informative
      Richard Perle on CNN called Pulitzer-winning investigative journalist Seymour Hersh "the closest thing American journalism has to a terrorist".

      Wolf Blitzer followed up by asking why Perle was accusing Hersh of being a terrorist. Instead of calling it a misquote, Perle said "he sets out to do damage".

      Perle was Reagan's assistant secretary of defense. Until February 2004 he chaired the advisory Defense Policy Board.

    4. Re:Translation: by rmohr02 · · Score: 4, Funny

      I forget, are we at war with Eurasia or Eastasia?

    5. Re:Translation: by Zork+the+Almighty · · Score: 5, Funny

      Does it matter ? You can trust Americans not to find either on a map.

      --

      In Soviet America the banks rob you!
    6. Re:Translation: by mrchaotica · · Score: 5, Funny

      Eurasia. Eastasia has too many "nucular" weapons already.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  2. Ah, terrorism by Tim+C · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The 21st century's answer to Communism when it comes to ignoring due process.

    1. Re:Ah, terrorism by wrinkledshirt · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's even better than Communism, though. At least that had the U.S.S.R. as its main symbol, so when the U.S.S.R as we knew it fell, politicians had to shift off that war onto something else (arguably the "War on Drugs"?).

      Now, though, it's been shown that the War on Terrorism can continue without any substantial nation-based symbol and can continue ad infinitum. Look at Iraq, and how a "terrorism threat" was conjured from practically nothing out of that country. Think it couldn't/wouldn't happen again if the war in Iraq was suddenly won, and the government's ratings were in the dumps, and a new enemy was needed?

      Check out the PNAC. It's not a football conference, but the latest way of governing the American people. Frightening and brilliant, and it's working.

      Anyhow, all that means is that every now and then, things like this are going to happen.

      --

      --------
      Bleah! Heh heh heh... BLEAH BLEAH!!! Ha ha ha ha...

    2. Re: Ah, terrorism by Moofie · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Other countries are not the Gold Standard of civil liberties. The Constitution is the Gold Standard of civil liberties, and it's being shredded.

      That's the problem. We don't need to become less free to be safe. We're already much safer from terrorism than we are from getting eaten by sharks, so "safe" is not an issue.

      The issue is control, and that should ALWAYS be resisted.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    3. Re: Ah, terrorism by Boronx · · Score: 5, Funny
      New Motto for George Bush's America:

      "Still better than North Korea".

      I'm sold.

    4. Re: Ah, terrorism by bhima · · Score: 5, Interesting
      You know, America is more free than some places. But it's fewer places than it was in 1980 (the year I became an American) and still fewer than in 2000 (the year I left).

      And that's sad

      --
      Nothing in the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity.
    5. Re: Ah, terrorism by Rei · · Score: 4, Informative

      Yeah, they had to change it from "Still Better Than Saddam" after this happened. ;)

      --
      That's it, Mr. Giraffe, get all the marmalade.
    6. Re: Ah, terrorism by dont_think_twice · · Score: 5, Funny

      We don't need to become less free to be safe. We're already much safer from terrorism than we are from getting eaten by sharks, so "safe" is not an issue.

      Which is exactly why I am declaring the War on Sharks. This world cannot tolerate one more senseless death to shark attack. We cannot sit back and wait for the sharks to attack us. We must go on the offensive and attack the sharks. Every shark that we kill in the Altantic Ocean is a shark that cannot attack us in New York City. Let me mako this very clear: Either you are with us, or you are with the sharks.

    7. Re: Ah, terrorism by ATMAvatar · · Score: 5, Funny

      Before you start your aquatic invasion, you might want to consider that you are more likely to be killed by a vending machine than a shark. If you do start the War on Vending, can I be your Haliburton and take all the caffienated drinks that spill from your fallen prey?

      --
      "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety."
  3. At least.... by SkankinMonkey · · Score: 5, Funny

    At least they didn't cite god's will as the reason. ;)

  4. Anybody still... by incom · · Score: 4, Insightful

    going to even try to refute that the government merely has to cry terrorism to get whatever it wants? Where are you now apologists.

    --
    True genius is grasping a situation like a peice of fruit, and peircing it just right so that it drains dry.
  5. But your honor... by Phoenix+Rising · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ... we didn't serve IndyMedia - we served RackSpace.

    Ah, the complexities of an information society. According to the government, you'd better own the equipment, not just the data. Data owners apparently have no standing to sue if they aren't directly served, even if it's their data that's confiscated.

    --
    Let us live so that when we come to die, even the undertaker will be sorry -- Mark Twain
    1. Re:But your honor... by parliboy · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Query along those lines

      In many jurisdictions (here in Texas to be sure), server leasing is considered leasing real property, just as if you leased an apartment or a car.

      Now, let's say the government confiscates your leased car. Do you have standing to retrieve your car, or do you say back to the car company, "Take it up with the government"?

      --
      "You're never ready, just less unprepared."
  6. What the hell's going on? by Bull999999 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    As far as I understand it, the Indymedia was hosted in UK but the FBI seized it on the request of Italian and Swiss governments. Is there an active interest in this matter by the US government other then just complying with the Mutual Legal Assistance in Criminal Matters Treaties (MLATs)?

    --
    1f u c4n r34d th1s u r34lly n33d t0 g37 l41d
    1. Re:What the hell's going on? by dietz · · Score: 4, Interesting

      It is believed that the FBI seized it on the request of either the Italian or the Swiss government.

      Since the FBI isn't talking, no one is quite sure who requested the actual seizure. Getting that information from the FBI is the first step towards unravelling this case.

  7. Re:It pertains to an ongoing terrorism investigati by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative


    Get the photos of the swiss cops here with this torrent
    it was nothing about terrorists, just people taking pics of cops that were trying to intimidate activists.

  8. Re:Nothing Important, People by captnitro · · Score: 5, Funny

    I object to the term 'tinfoil elitist'. When I wear my hat, it is made of only the most generic proletariat foil.

  9. Cuz by Goo.cc · · Score: 4, Funny

    They might as well have responded with a "cuz".

  10. Most Slashdot readers... by jd · · Score: 5, Funny

    Appear to be confused about this statement, claiming that it had to do with terrorism. No, it had to do with criminal terrorism. Other sorts of terrorism (as demonstrated by John Ashcroft's singing) are entirely legal. Please, please keep the distinction in your minds. Criminal terrorists are Bad. Legal terrorists are Good.

    --
    It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
  11. Re:It pertains to an ongoing terrorism investigati by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is the problem with the so-called "War on Terror." Any investigation can be kept secret and officially proclaimed to "pertain to a terrorist investigation." After that, it is closed to public debate and due process no longer applies.

  12. Re:It pertains to an ongoing terrorism investigati by dtfinch · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Only if you trust the government, and all its employees, and believe the war on terror should be fought with such secrecy that there's no way to know for certain if their actions have anything to do with the war on terror, or if they're using it as a blanket excuse to do whatever they want.

    Of all the millions of servers out there, they picked IndyMedia's. And how many days should it take to copy a hard disk for investigation, or to make another copy to put back into the server in place of the original? Couldn't most people do it in half an hour?

    It's not so much that they needed the evidence for their terror investigations that demands an explanation. They sought to do more harm than necessary to gather their evidence. Their actions were an assault on the free press and possibly an unlawful seizure, violating two constitutional amendments.

  13. very sad by DM9290 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It is sad that in the United States you apparently need special standing to request the unsealing of information for a warrant/subpoena.

    In Canada, the PUBLIC is considered to have an interest every time the STATE uses its power to seize something via a warrant/subpoena and any member of the public can request the information be unsealed and has standing to do so.

    On a similar theme, the public has the right to order transcripts of court proceedings for the same reason.

    The process of Justice is considered to be a matter of public interest. Not simply a private matter between the state and whoever the state is screwing over.

    Their argument about the MLAT treaty is persuasive however. It seems to contradict their argument about terrorism however.

    Either the seizure was according to the a Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty (MLAT) and was therefore done on behalf of another country, or it was at the behest of US authorities to protect american national security.

    Does anyone know the identity of the unnamed "REQUESTING STATE"? Or is that a secret also?

    Because it seems by refusing to ID the requesting state the government is also necessarily refusing to ID the authority of which specific treaty they are relying on. Pointing out the Treaty would tend to ID the requesting state (in so far as it would be a signatory)

    I don't think you can rely on a treaty if you don't want to identify it to the court. that is just my hunch. Justice is called Justice for a reason.

    --
    No one has a right to their *own* opinion. They have a right to the TRUTH.
  14. Re:Aren't all lefties terrorists? by shitdrummer · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think the US definition of a terrorist is someone who puts their interests, or the interests of their family or country before those of the US.

    I define a terrorist as someone who is willing to use terror against civilians as a means to further their cause. By this definition, the US administration is a terrorist organisation. Not only that, I believe that the US can now be classed as a religiously fanatic state sponsor of terrorism.

    Just ask yourselves, who is responsible for spreading fear throughout the US and the world? What colour alert level is the US on this week?

    Shitdrummer.

  15. That's always been the case by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 5, Informative

    If the government needs something I have in a bank safe deposit box, they go and serve the bank with a warrant. If they need my employee records, they serve my employer with a warrant.

    A warrant is just a legal declaration that allows law enforcement to etner a place they may not normally enter or seize something they may not normally seize. Law enforcement can't just come and take a computer randomly from a company or person. They have to get a warrant from a judge to do so. However the warrant is to enter the premises or seize the goods, so it is presented to the persons concerned. They don't go, present it to you, and ask you to go get the goods, then maybe alter them, before you hand them over.

    Also, Indymedia has standing to sue, they didn't however, the EFF did and that was part of the judges ruling (read more than the /. blurb). The EFF has no standing. However, even if Indymedia sues, doesn't mean records will be unsealed. There are plenty of cases where revealing specifics will screw an investigation, and in those cases the judge generally keeps the records sealed. They are unsealed at trial, when the case is dropped, or if it drags on for too long.

    Nothing has changed in an information society, except that we'll probably see more seizing of computers to get at data used in criminal activities. It's no different than if you had a physical book with your accounting of illegal activities in storage or at a bank. They'd serve the place that physically had the book to get it. They aren't going to serve you and hope that you give it to them unaltered and intact.

  16. Re:Iraq DID have ties to Al Qaeda by MooseByte · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Iraq had ties to orginizations that supported terrorism."

    And the US had ties to organizations that supported terrorism (check your Central American/Afghanistan/etc. history). One man's "terrorist" is another man's "Freedom Fighter".

    In fact we even had direct ties to Saddam while he was gassing his own people.

    We should invade ourselves.

  17. the truth about freedom by N3wsByt3 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It amuses me to see people counterargument the fact that this is a blatant abuse by the government of the freedoms that people enjoy in the west, by pointing out how much worse some people have it in other parts of the world. It simply doesn't make sense.

    How is it less a restriction of freedom, because other countries even have LESS freedom? that's like saying you get more hungry, but some are even hungrier then you...So what? Does that fill your stomac? Does it invalidates that you are hungry? No. Neither is getting less freedom any better by noting that others have even less. It doesn't contracdict the issue, and it does nothing to change it. We are not becoming more free because other countries are even less free.

    The fact that so many people actually accept the bull that the state says in this regard, is proof of a more fundamental truth about human nature: the fact that, ultimately, for most ppl, freedom isn't the most important, it is security. Contrary to what a great leader once said, most hoi palloi are all to happy to exchange their freedoms for a gain in security, or even an impression of improved security. People want to feel safe, and most don't care all that much about other things, compared to that. They don't care that people get imprisoned without due process, because they are bad ppl and evil terrorists, which should be locked up indefinately - for their (the citizens) protection, of course. they don't care about all the draconian laws that restrict their freedom, because it is portrayed (and seen) as a necessary way to protect themselves.

    A best example is a post I read about the iraqi people. Even though it was presented as a counterargument, in fact the poster gave a prime example of the kind of human nature I just described. He claimed iraqi's were getting far more freedom now then under Sadam. Well, yes. But the irony is, more and more people think the period they experience now is far worse then under sadam. In some area's, even to the point that they would rather have him back. Because, for all the atrocities he did (and a lot of people hated and feared him for it), their was one thing the populace recognise that they have completely lost, and that is security and stability. Humans abhor chaos, one could say.

    I doubt many in the US will have ever seen all those documentaries that actually show how the populace yearns the order that was present under sadam, even if he was a ruthless dictator. Among the populace, they care a lot less about all the so called freedom they have gained, and a lot more about stability and security. what good does it do that you have the right to protest, if you have no job, no income, bombs explode every day, and you can get shot when making the use of the right to protest?

    That's the deeper truth of human nature: by and large, freedom is a a far second or third in the list of most important things. That's why people don't care about freedoms getting trampled, as long as the impression exists it's improving safety and security.

    --
    --- "To pee or not to pee, that is the question." ---
  18. Re:For Pete's sake. by dietz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It would seem that the more sensational a case is, the more potential there is for an EFF/ACLU to get involved, no matter the merits.

    Here's what I don't get about your "point": There's nothing about this case that makes it sensational. There were no naked people, no animals hurt, no child molestation, etc.

    If you think this case is "sensational" you think so because the very idea of the government clobbering free speech without even giving an explanation is an injustice. If you disagree with that sentiment, there's nothing "sensational" to this story at all!

    So, what sorts of cases do you think the EFF/ACLU should pursue that aren't sensational?

    I think perhaps you're confusing "sensational" with high-profile. The problem is that it's often the EFF/ACLU's involvement that makes a case high profile. Like when the ACLU argued that Nike should be allowed to lie in marketing materials: that case really only became high profile because the ACLU got involved, not the other way around.

  19. Re:Iraq DID have ties to Al Qaeda by AK+Marc · · Score: 4, Informative

    Iraq had nothing to do with 911

    And that is the answer that we were not given before the invasion.

    but it did have ties to those that supported Al Qaeda.

    Fewer ties than Saudi Arabia. Did we invade there? How about Iran?

    If ties to al Qaeda was the litmus test, then we still struck the wrong place.

  20. Re:For Pete's sake. by Fnkmaster · · Score: 5, Insightful

    How are there no merits here? You think the government should have the right to seize property without due process, without judicial oversight, and without disclosing the nature of why they are seizing the property?

    The "justness" of the cause is measured by the fact that our government is abusing its power systematically. Sneak-and-peek warrants, requiring no judicial approval - and now seizing of servers "at the request of another nation", claiming protection under treaty and revoking the property rights of somebody to their leased servers under the guise that the warrants weren't served to them, therefore they have no right to information on said warrants. This all adds up to flagrant abuse, and it makes me disgusted to be an American.

    Sometimes, as in the this case, the EFF is standing up for an organization, IndyMedia, that I find incredibly distasteful. I'm a liberal (which is a good thing - I won't allow that word to be perverted to mean something bad as your ilk keep trying to do), and I share almost no beliefs in common with the radicals at IndyMedia. Nonetheless, I will stand up for their right to express themselves and be free from persecution.

    And THAT my friend is the difference between you and me. I don't think you are trolling, but I really wish you were. The worst part is that you aren't even embarrassed to hold such disgusting views. Now go wash your mouth out with soap and think about how horrible it is that you think that defending civil liberties has "negative connotations", because you don't agree with some people and don't think they ought to have the same civil liberties that you have.

  21. Re:Aren't all lefties terrorists? by Stealth+Potato · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Okay, I know I'm feeding a troll here, but oh well. The poor things will starve if I don't do this every now and then. :-)

    The US didn't blow up unarmed at distance individuals going to work (9/11).

    You are correct if you are suggesting that the US did not orchestrate the 9/11 attacks. However, you are dead wrong if you are claiming that the United States has never blown up unarmed civilians, going to work or otherwise. In war, the civilian populations are almost always the ones who suffer the most, and the United States military has its share of civilian deaths under its belt.

    Look here for a few examples of what I'm talking about. [Note that that page says, from the "2003 Iraq War", but it should probably say, "2003, 2004, 2005, ... Iraq War"] Many of these could be described as unfortunate accidents, as happen in a war, but remember also that it was the United States that employed the practice of striking "economic" targets in the first and second Gulf Wars; that was the euphemism they used for the killing of civilians in their workplaces. What was the World Trade Center but a very large economic target, and those innocents murdered but "collateral damage" (as the military likes to term it)? I'm not trying to justify 9/11, but you should think about these things in perspective. We're not in a position to decry such acts when they occur on our soil if we happily commit them abroad.

    Looking a little farther back, there was Operation: Just 'Cause [my apostrophe ;-)] in which the US invaded Panama in an attempt to seize General Manuel Noriega, in which somewhere between 300 and 3,000 Panamanian civilians (depending who you ask) were killed in waves of indiscriminate neighborhood bombings, and thousands more were rendered homeless. There are many more examples, if you would care to study our military history. Nothing can possibly justify the slaughter of nearly 3,000 innocent people in the United States on September 11th, but if you look at our history, you'll see that our government and military haven't exactly let civilian lives stand in the way of their objectives either.

    The US is not led by rich jerks like Bin Laden or Sadam who's sole purpose in life is to use religeon as an excuse to accumulate power and kill people who do not agree with his views.

    You're half-right. The "rich jerks" part is dead on, and the bit about using religion to accumulate power could conceivably be applied. Of course, there's no way to truly understand the motivations of our leaders, but there's little doubt that they have thus far taken advantage of panic and fear to further their political careers. As for the killing of political dissidents, it hasn't happened in this country so far (at least, that we know of ;-), but just look at all the other countries that bear the mark of US-sponsored totalitarianism. How about Nicaragua, with the US-trained death squads and terror groups? Or Chile, where the US helped install the brutal tyrant Auguste Pinochet? Or Israel, which is to this day supported by US funding and weapons, and which freely executes alleged "terrorists" (including a paraplegic in a wheelchair) without any trace of due process, and without even any regard for the civilian lives that happen to be around when the missiles hit? The list goes on.

    Your ticked because you cannot join the brown (Nati) or Al-queda and be a bigger jerk. If Bush were to kill his political enemies he would not last long.

    True. I'm very glad to live in a country where we have such liberties that, even as they are being gradually eroded by panic and fear-mongering, are much greater than those experienced in most other places in the world. But your comment about the grandparent poster wanting to join a terrorist organization doesn't even make sense. H

  22. Why would the MAN do this otherwise? by gelfling · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Why would the Gubmint really care all that much about Indymedia unless it was a big deal.

    For all the chomskyist-libertarians here screaming about the repression of YOUR rights, there is an equal number of people deluded into believing that Indymedia or their Blog is something so momentous that the government felt the need to randomly quash it.

    That's kind of the same worldview that alien abductees have, that they themselves are so significant that beings from the Horehead Nebula would hump it all the way over here to examine them.

    Sorry but no, more than likely something Indymedia did, or some funding source attached to them did something to raise some red flags. Indymedia PRIDES itself on being subversive and doing tangential things with groups that are on the fringes to begin with. Why would this be any different? It probably is not different.

  23. Re:Iraq DID have ties to Al Qaeda by statusbar · · Score: 4, Informative
    Don't bother looking at the liberal buddies.

    Look at the facts:

    Vice President Dick Cheney was a vocal critic of trade embargoes while he headed Halliburton, a Houston-based oil services conglomerate, from 1995 to 2000. Under Mr. Cheney, Halliburton expanded its trade with Iran through an offshore subsidiary. That arrangement is being investigated by a federal grand jury.

    Nineteen executives or directors of companies fined by OFAC for dealing with state sponsors of terrorism were top campaign fund-raisers for Mr. Bush.

    Also:

    Federal authorities also are investigating whether Halliburton broke the law by using a subsidiary to do business in Iran and whether it was involved in an alleged $180 million bribery scheme in Nigeria. The company admitted in 2003 that it improperly paid $2.4 million to a Nigerian tax official.

    So, in reality, Haliburton may have been trading with the "axis of evil" Just like Prescott Bush did!

    --jeff

    --
    ipv6 is my vpn
  24. Re:Aren't all lefties terrorists? by Stealth+Potato · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Well, how about the "Shock and Awe" campaign earlier in the conflict? IIRC, that was intended to terrify the population of the city (military and civilian) into submission.

    And like I said, there were the many civilian "economic" targets destroyed by the US in Iraq. One could argue that the World Trade Center was just an "economic target" in the war against the United States. What exactly is the difference between that terrorist attack and the American missiles that rip through hospitals, schools, and places of commerce?

    And how about this video clip, showing a US helicopter crew firing on a group of unarmed civilians? Last time I checked, blasting civilians into a bloody spray as they walk down the street serves no military purpose.

    Obviously, not all the civilian deaths in the Iraq conflict were the result of attacks specifically targeting civilians. However, I still call into question the judgement of those in command, who made the decision to exercise military power, knowing full well what the cost would be. After all, you try explaining to the man whose entire family was slaughtered that his loved ones died because of recklessness instead of malice. Do you think it makes much difference to him?

  25. Re:It pertains to an ongoing terrorism investigati by DavidTC · · Score: 5, Interesting
    See, for the longest time, a few random people have been causing trouble at various protests. Just one or two. And the police have responding with force against all protesters. For some reason, even despite the police taking pictures to show the level of violence the protesters were using, the police would never go after the actual troublemakers.

    Well, thanks to the internet, the protesters are taking pictures of the troublemakers and they're sticking up the pictures and saying 'Who the fuck is this person breaking this car window? If anyone knows who this is, tell us.'.

    Well...they're undercover cops. Duh. Everyone suspected that, but that's what all this racket is about.

    Logically, it makes no sense, if you've infiltrated an organization, and they post pictures of stuff, to say 'Hey, that's our undercover cops! Take those pictures down!'. That's just crazy. If they don't know they're undercover cops, don't tell them. If they do know, well, you're screwed anyway, pull them back in.

    But these undercover cops are there to cause problems so the police can escalate the force used against the protesters. Having their faces plastered around is likely to be rather bad PR.

    Except, of course, the traditional news is completely ignoring this.

    --
    If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  26. Re:Aren't all lefties terrorists? by metlin · · Score: 5, Informative

    Hello?

    He was the _leader_ of Hamas at the time of his assasination. He was _killing_ people. He was _ordering_ the deaths of more civlians through suicide bombings, and openly admitted and challenged Israel to it.

    He was sentenced to life imprisonment in 1989, and later on released in 1997 - following which we went back and started a spate of attacks on civilians through suicide bombings. The Hellfire missile hit him and all the people who were killed were his aides and his bodyguards.

    Yeah, it's sad that Israel has lowered itself to the level of the militants whom they're up against, but when peace does not work, what is it that we could do against people who would not go against the word of "God".

    Ask yourself this: even if a man is guilty, is it right to kill him without trial, without provocation, without immediate threat, and at the cost of innocent lives?

    He was guilty, a terrorist who was leading a terrorist group at the time of assasination, who was a threat and would have ordered more, had he been alive. And oh, there were no innocent casualties - the only people who were killed in the vicinity were his aides and bodyguards.

    If Osama were out there and we could kill him, do you expect us to stay our hands because we've not had his trial?

  27. Re:Don't even waste your breath by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Never mind the fact that we bailed out Europe (twice)

    Oh goodey. You mean in the First World War there were Good Guys vs Bad Guys as opposed to a bunch of brainless empires killing each other's cannon fodder off? News to me!

    And in the WWII I seem to recall something about that Red Army thing who seem to have captured some city called Berlin despite the fact that the Germans had 190 divisions fighting in the East compared to 59 in the West..

    and saved the entire globe from Communism

    Err..no. Mr. Regan taking credit notwithstanding (he was fond of that particular gig) the USSR collapsed from within due to its loooong lasting structural weakneses which were seeded at the time of its creation. As far as Communism is concerned, it merely underwent some transformations and is alive and well, last time seen spending lavishly in China while sipping Martinis.

    To these people the US and everything that we stand for is evil and they are rooting for us to lose

    You see the saddest part is that the US was at a time a beacon of freedom and Enlightement, to which most of the world looked up in awe and inspiration. Then people like you, who use terms like "niggerlovers" got in power. Now the US is a rotting corpse of its former ideals, a zombie lurching about looking for blood and brains, a terryfing and sad sight, made more frightening by the fact that the rest of the world now knows with certainty that even the fairest and healthiest of nations are not immune to this terrible disease which seeks to lower the curtain of Dark Age back on our civilization. A disease feeding on greed, ignorance, hubris but most nurished by religious bigotry and zeal. This sad truth is only reinforced by the images of toys and candy handed out to children whose parents are murdered that same evening as "collateral damage" or "insurgents and terrorists".

    It's better to just ignore them and their message of hate and move on knowing that the vast majority of us stand for the right thing

    Right. Ignore discourse, ignore dissent, ignore information, ignore facts because you are Right by nature. Or perheaps made Right by your religion. Or a word of your pious leader. Onward Christian Soldiers.

  28. Re:Aren't all lefties terrorists? by 1u3hr · · Score: 4, Informative
    The My Lai Massacre? Are you kidding me? This happened during the middle of a nasty war. The Lieutenant who ordered the attack was charged with murder. No one in our government condones what happened.

    William Calley was charged, and convicted, but got "house arrest" for a few years. His actions were apparently condoned by your then-president, who set him loose. They were just gooks, after all.

    http://www.vietnam-war.info

    Calley ordered the men of Charlie Company, 1st Battalion, American Division to shoot everyone in the village.

    He was initially sentenced to life in prison, but President Richard Nixon ordered him released from prison. Calley served 3 1/2 years of house arrest in his quarters at Fort Benning, Georgia and was then released in 1974 by a federal judge.