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And, yes, I DO take it personally

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Bill Moyers interview with Rev. Jeremiah Wright

i've been waiting to grab this interview and, thanks to ich, i got the full thing from google video...

Jeremiah Wright on Bill Moyers' Journal (Part 1 of 2)



Jeremiah Wright on Bill Moyers' Journal (Part 2 of 2)

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Saturday, December 01, 2007

From 1987: Bill Moyers' "Secret Government"

an important piece of our history, particularly relevant today... as you're watching, just keep telling yourself, this was made twenty years ago...

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Saturday, November 17, 2007

Bill Moyers on the FCC vs. We, The People

this was put up on moyers' pbs site yesterday... make no mistake... what is described here is part and parcel of the constitutional crisis in the united states where, slowly and very, very surely, we the people are subjected to ever more homogenized, corporate and government-approved propaganda...



the fcc public comment period ends december 11... you can make your views known here...

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Tuesday, November 06, 2007

Extraordinary Rendition - watch it tonight on PBS

check here for local listings...


FRONTLINE/World begins a new season of investigations this November with a story about the CIA's controversial rendition program. Five years ago, award-winning journalist Stephen Grey left his job at The Sunday Times in London to investigate one of the darkest sides of the Bush Administration’s war on terror. Beginning with the mysterious flight logs of secret CIA flights, Grey and others uncovered a secret CIA prison system involving countries like Egypt, Jordan, and Morocco, and the CIA's own "black sites," where the White House authorized "enhanced interrogation techniques," which critics say amount to torture.

In "Extraordinary Rendition," Grey sets out to find the CIA'S "ghost prisoners" themselves -- some confirmed as high-value al Qaeda members, others unwittingly caught and released months or years later without charge. He also questions former CIA and FBI officials as the debate grows in Washington over the effectiveness and legality of extrajudicial detention and interrogation. "There aren’t many enthusiasts now inside the CIA who want to round up dozens of people anymore. But the threat is still there," says Grey. "The key thing is that until Congress and the American people decide on a way of dealing with prisoners in the courtroom according to the rule of law, the CIA probably hasn’t got any alternative but to either hold prisoners secretly in their own detention system, or to render them to countries that will do the CIA bidding."

abc's blotter has some fairly explosive coverage on info contained in this documentary here...

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"not yet read in"

The fact that Padilla was driven out-of-his-mind seems to have escaped Judge Michael Mukasey, too. Will Mukasey be ok with the same standards being applied to him and administration war criminals? But wait - there is mind altering drug torture to bring people around to "sanity", enough to be accountable in court after they have been driven out-of-their-minds. At least some jurisdictions are beginning to mitigate that though, albeit even while they trample other rights, one step forward, two steps back.

Orrin Kerr at The Volokh Conspiracy points to this interesting observation that:


Judges are generalists and therefore they are at an inherent disadvantage vis-à-vis academics on narrow topics of law."

from CounterPunch:
Man's inhumanity to man rattles the sensibilities of all but the most hard-hearted, and like any other American, I was appalled to read the accounts of the very powerful (us) inflicting great harm on the weak and defenseless (them). Un-American to the core, torture by any method offends and repels, but nothing could have prepared me for the shocking, horrifying, de-humanizing accounts of the Water Cure inflicted by American soldiers on captured Filipino guerillas.

Whether any form of water boarding can be torture is beneath debate, and Attorney General nominee, Michael Mukasey, was horribly wrong to equivocate on this issue when questioned before the Senate Judiciary Committee."

Tonight, November 6, on PBS at 9 pm: "Extraordinary Rendition"

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