December 08, 2007
Letter to the Editor of the Intelligencer, December 8, 2007
Yes, apparently it is "Wishful thinking: No impeachment for Bush, Cheney" (your editorial, Dec. 4) to expect that those who swear to defend the Constitution will actually uphold their oath. Never thought we'd see the day when our so-called leaders would find so many excuses to let the rule of law slip away.
October 16, 2007
September 30, 2007
Demonstrate against the War October 27
Ride the R5 Peace Train from Doylestown or Lansdale in central and upper Bucks, both preceded by pre-boarding rallies with speakers and music.
Doylestown: 10:30 a.m. Meet at Rep. Patrick Murphy's office, 60 N. Main St., then proceed to train station for rally there; departure at 11:23.
Lansdale: 11:15 a.m. Rally at train station (Main & Green); departure at 11:46.
September 05, 2007
Conscience of a Conservative, Jack L. Goldsmith
Charlie Savage: Takeover
"Fresh Air from WHYY, September 5, 2007 · Boston Globe reporter Charlie Savage won a 2007 Pulitzer Prize for a series detailing how often President Bush used "signing statements" — controversial assertions of a chief executive's right to bypass provisions of new laws.
"Now Savage has written a book describing how the Bush-Cheney administration has expanded executive power. It's called Takeover: The Return of the Imperial Presidency and the Subversion of American Democracy."
September 04, 2007
Anti-Defamation League on Stephen Walt
Stephen Walt on 'The Israel Lobby' on NPR
"Walt teaches international affairs at Harvard University's John F. Kennedy School of Government."
July 29, 2007
Close Guantanamo! Restore our Constitution!
Sami Al-Hajj, Prisoner 345 at Guantanamo, was arrested in December 2001 while traveling to Pakistan as a cameraman for Al Jazeera. He has been on a hunger strike since January 7, 2007. More at NPR's On the Media, July 29, 2007, and Prisoner345.net.
July 04, 2007
June 03, 2007
Day of Action to Restore Law and Justice June 26
To the Editor:
Unlike Bush and Rumsfeld, the Nazis initially drew the line at hypothermia and waterboarding, but about 1943 the French Gestapo experimented with what was euphemistically termed the "cold bath" technique on Resistance captives, later exporting it to
Sullivan continues, "Freezing prisoners to near-death, repeated beatings, long forced-standing, waterboarding, cold showers in air-conditioned rooms, stress positions [Arrest mit Verschaerfung], withholding of medicine and leaving wounded or sick prisoners alone in cells for days on end—all these have occurred at US detention camps under the command of President George W. Bush. Over a hundred documented deaths have occurred in these interrogation sessions. The Pentagon itself has conceded homicide by torture in multiple cases."
It's past time for Congress to rein in—since the Democrats haven't yet found the courage to impeach—a team that our own intelligence experts acknowledge has on balance only fueled terrorism.
Amnesty International, the ACLU, National Religious Campaign Against Torture, and others will hold a DC rally and lobbying Day of Action to Restore Law and Justice on June 26—details at www.AmnestyBucksMont.org. If you can't join us for the trip, sign the petition and call on Congress to support the restoration of habeas corpus, the repair of the Military Commissions Act, and an end to torture.
April 21, 2007
April 19, 2007
February 11, 2007
Possibilities for restoring habeas corpus
January 27, 2007
Talks given on the Military Commissions Act
Charpentier: “So my answer [to question] is that the Military Commissions Act does not afford the detainees a fair trial, and the Congress would have been better off to take heed from what the Supreme Court was truly telling them in the decision of Hamdan, which is that if you aren't going to use the civil courts, which is where I practice, use the Code of Military Justice. We have things in place. And so you as involved taxpayers—or else you wouldn’t be here, you as involved citizens, you know, should really hear that.”
Nolan challenges the administration’s claims about who is imprisoned at Guantánamo and whether U.S. treatment of detainees accords with U.S. and international law. “It’s outrageous. This is a classic study of government out of control. They go on TV and say, ‘We don’t torture,’ but they do!” He also disputes the government’s claim that “these are the worst of the worst.” According to Seton Hall Law School Professor Mark Denbeaux's analysis, “only 5 percent of the detainees were captured by United States forces. 86 percent of the detainees were arrested by either Pakistan or the Northern Alliance.” Many had been turned in by bounty hunters responding to U.S. leaflets dropped over Afghanistan promising “wealth and power beyond your dreams . . . millions of dollars.”
“They’ve been stripped of habeas corpus, and they can’t challenge their detention,” Nolan says. “Some of them have been there five years. There’s no due process.”
Charpentier and Nolan participated in the Guantánamo teach-in on October 5, 2006, at Temple University's Beasley School of Law. Charpentier grew up in Doylestown and graduated from CB West. Raised in the area, Nolan graduated from Lansdale Catholic High School.
January 19, 2007
Jimmy Carter re Israel/Palestine
By Jimmy Carter, Washington Post, January 18, 2007
"I am concerned that public discussion of my book Palestine: Peace, Not Apartheid has been diverted from the book's basic proposals: that peace talks be resumed after six years of delay and that the tragic persecution of Palestinians be ended. Although most critics have not seriously disputed or even mentioned the facts and suggestions about these two issues, an apparently concerted campaign has been focused on the book's title, combined with allegations that I am anti-Israel. This is not good for any of us who are committed to Israel's status as a peaceful nation living in harmony with its neighbors." [Continued]
Jimmy Carter on Fresh Air/WHYY, November 27, 2006
January 16, 2007
Expert on terrorism sheds light
January 12, 2007
Talk on MCA on Wednesday, January 24, 7:30 p.m. in Doylestown
Upper Bucks for Democracy
January 24, 7:30 p.m., Celtic Cross Room
Doylestown Presbyterian Church
127 E. Court St., Doylestown, PA 18901
“They’ve been stripped of habeas corpus, and they can’t challenge their detention,” Nolan says. “Some of them have been there five years. There’s no due process. This is Star Chamber litigation. No one can see the light of day.”
January 09, 2007
Mary Robinson, champion of human rights
January 04, 2007
Talk on MCA on Thursday, January 11, 7 p.m., and Wednesday, January 24, 7:30 p.m.
—Cristi Charpentier, January 11, 2007
Upper Bucks for Democracy, &
Bucks County PDA
January 11, 7 p.m., Plumstead Township Building
5186 Stump Road (0.4 mi east of 611 on right)
Plumsteadville, PA 18949
January 24, 7:30 p.m., Celtic Cross Room
Doylestown Presbyterian Church
127 E. Court St., Doylestown, PA 18901
When the U.S. military began shipping prisoners from the war on terror to Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, one goal was clear: to keep them outside the reach of the U.S. court system. But nearly five years later, those cases remain stuck exactly where the Bush administration didn't want them to be. [continued]