June 15, 2008

McCain Takes Gitmo Ruling Personally

Why Does GOP Candidate Scorn Supreme Court's Affirmation Of Right Of Habeus Corpus?

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(CBS)  John McCain, the presumptive Republican nominee, told a crowd of supporters in New Jersey Friday that the Supreme Court’s latest Guantanamo Bay ruling is “one of the worst decisions in the history of this country.”

Why would the normally stoic senator become so hyperbolic about a ruling that, at its essence, strengthens the vitality of the “Great Writ” of habeas corpus - a bedrock constitutional right?

There are several reasons. As a political matter, McCain clearly understands that in his quest to enchant the hard-right wing of the Grand Old Party, he must rail upon the Supreme Court whenever it happens to disagree with the Bush Administration on legal aspects of the war on terrorism.

This is why, just a few weeks ago, McCain delivered a speech that hammered the federal judiciary, sweeping away any lingering notion that he intends to govern as a moderate on legal policy and priorities.

So, whether or not McCain really believes what he says, it is good politics (read: inaccurate and unfair) to declare that the Court just sided with the terrorists over the President when five Justices ruled that the terror suspects detained in Cuba may challenge their detentions in our civilian courts.

And it is good politics to warn of the detainees clogging those courts with frivolous lawsuits - like current domestic prisoners do - even though the suspects so far only have sought to have some sort of objective, neutral fact-finder evaluate the government’s classification of them as “enemy combatants.”

The main reason for McCain’s strong language, however, is as personal as political.

Following the last Supreme Court ruling on this topic, which also struck down stubborn Administration detainee policies, the Senator (a Vietnam torture victim himself) invested no small amount of his own treasured (and well-earned) historical capital to try to broker a deal on the detainees.

And, in late 2006, he did.

It’s called the Military Commissions Act. It was a terrible idea from the very beginning, and it was one of two federal statutes undercut by the Justices last Thursday. It’s no wonder the nominee is taking the defeat personally.

After first insisting that federal law clearly and unambiguously outlaw “torture,” McCain suddenly caved to White House pressure on the MCA, allowing the Administration to insert into the law a clause that effectively allows (and, indeed, legally buttresses the efforts of) the executive branch to implement torture as a means of interrogation.

Without McCain’s pander, there would have been no bad law for the Court to strike down last week. Without McCain’s grandiloquent appeal to Democrats and moderates during that lame-duck session, there quite possibly might have been a better law that just might have passed its constitutional test this term.

McCain’s sell-out on the torture language is not the reason the Justices declared the MCA unconstitutional. It is not the reason why the detainees now have more access to federal courts than they did before. But it is emblematic of the larger and much more destructive, seven-year-long sell-out of the legislative branch in the legal fight against terrorism.

And that emblem, thanks to the Supreme Court, now has John McCain’s face on it just in time for the run-up to the general election.

This is not necessarily fair. It’s not just John McCain who failed or refused to do the right thing. Last week’s ruling was the fourth defeat in a row for the Administration at the Supreme Court. And on the past three occasions the Congress has responded not by embracing the hints and clues left by the Court’s majorities - by, say, brokering a desperately-needed deal between executive and judicial branches over a terror law policy - but by siding with the White House.

McCain and other so-called “moderates” have had the power for years to avoid these Supreme Court showdowns and show-ups. They just haven’t had the political courage to exercise that power.

All of which means the Supreme Court isn’t the only reason why the terror detainees remain in legal limbo. The White House is to blame for pushing beyond the legal limits of executive power. And the Congress is to blame for allowing it to happen despite entreaties by the judiciary for help.

If I were a good man like McCain, I’d be embarrassed by this. And perhaps he is. And perhaps that embarrassment is expressing itself in anger instead of consideration. In any case, it’s misguided.

Contrary to the angry candidate’s remarks, last week’s Boumediene ruling is not on a par with the Court’s 1857 Dred Scott decision that tagged slaves as “property;” its 1896 Plessy v. Ferguson decision that endorsed the “separate but equal” doctrine; or its Korematsu v. United States decision that affirmed the detention of Japanese-Americans during World War II.

In fact, the recent ruling on detainee rights will be revered, not reviled, by future generations, who will study the first decade following the terror attacks on America with a curious mix of regret and sadness about lost opportunities, legal and otherwise, that hampered our collective response.

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Add a Comment See all 144 Comments
by pvperson June 15, 2008 3:53 PM EDT
I don''t understand the attempt by many to paint McCain as a good, moderate man. His actions in the last ten years have repeatedly proved him neither GOOD as in good for our country or moderate as in wanting to further Bush/Cheney policies. His opinions on the war, economy, defiect, taxes, torture, etc., etc. proves him to be just another republican.
Reply to this comment
by pr_boxer June 15, 2008 3:57 PM EDT
He''s just like Bush isn''t he? If you like unjustified , un-ending war,being in an economic tailspin, high gas prices, and a general world wide loss of respect, McCain''s your man!
Reply to this comment
by wogerwabbit June 15, 2008 4:07 PM EDT
It seems that every day McCain demonstrates how unqualified he is for the presidency. Bush with a bad temper, just what we need.
Reply to this comment
by tryhonesty June 15, 2008 4:15 PM EDT
John McCain is the ultimate flip-flopper, total disregard for Democracy, Constitution and Bill of Rights of the United States. He is another dangerous person just like Bush and Cheney, power for the few and the HELL with everyone else! Let us all FLUSH these RepubliCON morons out of political office this Fall. These people hate America, look at the state of our country. It is terrible. It is disgraceful. America can not afford any more RepubliCONs!
Reply to this comment
by tbweb June 15, 2008 4:27 PM EDT
The main problem with Guantanamo Bay detention is that if the U.S. really does have the wrong terror suspect there is no way for the wrong terror suspect to argue their case. Its possible however unlikely to be holding the wrong person, especially in a culture where everyone dresses alike and has similar features, its easier to get identity wrong. The main problem I have with Guantanamo Bay detention is that once you go there as a terror suspect its almost impossible to get out if you really are innocent, the United States can do better than that and I think the Supreme Court decision is based on this.
Reply to this comment
by messiahx4eve June 15, 2008 4:40 PM EDT
Anyone else notice that bush is making NO EFFORT to get to Iowa to survey the damage there from the flooding? Only a person with an IQ just that of a talking monkey would vote for insane mccain.
Reply to this comment
by G H M June 15, 2008 4:53 PM EDT
Poor Johnny McSame is going to loose more voters by his stand against the Supreme Court rulling.
He might be old but his age didn''t make him in the brain category. Dumb really Dumb!!
Reply to this comment
by cosmotopper June 15, 2008 4:58 PM EDT
It is unfortunate that many of those who are commenting on the Supreme Court ruling haven''t taken the time to investigate what we already know about the methods used by the Bush administration to populate the Gulag we have established at Guantanamo. If one googles ''Murat Kurnaz'' or ''Khalid al-Masri'', the ugly facts are easily available.

There is no question that prisoners of war should not be granted access to our judicial system. That is why, as a Republican, I am so incensed at the abuses of it''s war powers authority by the Bush administration. To kidnap, torture and then incarcerate a completely innocent foreign national, for over 4 years, is simply inexcusable, even if there were only one case, such as the case of Mr. Kurnaz. It is not the Supreme Court which has compromised our ability to exercise military force, it is the Bush administration itself, by this, and various other egregious mistakes and general incompetence.

The war on terror, particularly on it''s front-line in Afghanistan, is being lost for no other reason than the relentless failure of the Bush administration''s stewardship. Worse, the moral high-ground on which this nation must stand, if it is to stand at all, has been squandered. Thank God for the Supreme Court, which by it''s ruling, began the process of reclaiming that ground.
Reply to this comment
by conspiracygirl June 15, 2008 4:59 PM EDT
If the USA were to actually follow its own constitution, Americans would be safer -- not more at risk as many Republicans and Democrats now claim.

When we imprison people without the right to Habeas Corpus -- without being able to answer to the charges against them -- we infuriate the rest of the world.

How would we feel if our dad or our daughter were thrown into a prison in Equador or somewhere -- indefinitely -- without being able to answer to the charges...?

Why then, would we NOT expect the families and fellow citizens of these Guantanamo detainess to seek revenge...? When our leaders do *** like this they make America a more dangerous place to live.

We need to start acting like the moral country we once were.

And that is why I will never vote for McCain.

Bob Barr ''08
Reply to this comment
by jerrystarlin June 15, 2008 5:00 PM EDT
"In fact, the recent ruling on detainee rights will be revered, not reviled, by future generations, who will study the first decade following the terror attacks on America with a curious mix of regret and sadness about lost opportunities, legal and otherwise, that hampered our collective response."

This is what we have come to expect from the network that blithely accepted forged documents to "prove" GWB received preferential treatment in the National Guard during the Vietnam era!

This statement assumes an unending series of new generations to look back at this decision, whereas if the Islamic Extremists have their way, the United States as we know it will have no freedom, but will be under Islamic Sharia Law.

This court has interpreted the constitution as being a suicide pact. McCain will gain if he sticks to his guns in opposition to this ruling.
Reply to this comment
by jerrystarlin June 15, 2008 5:09 PM EDT
This article, supposedly reporting what John McCain said, is thinly veiled commentary posing as news. It "assigns" reasons and tells us why McCain is upset with the ruling - but none of the reasons given are taken from McCain''s statements.

Instead, the pudit (I will not honor him/her with the title "reporter") does not report. He or she ascribles reasons for McCain''s opposition to the ruling without allowing McCain to speak for himself.

Isn''t this what people are accusing the Bush Administration of doing to the detainees at Guantanamo?
Reply to this comment
by toolmangler-2009 June 15, 2008 5:11 PM EDT
Every human being on earth has the right to defend themselves. If you are grabbed off a street by one secret agency or another you still have the right to defend your life. If it is a legitimate government it has to give a justifiable reason for holding on to you
(Fairy tale #1)
Reply to this comment
by haoli25 June 15, 2008 5:15 PM EDT
The more I look at Little Hussein and McBush, the more presidential Peter Griffin looks.
Reply to this comment
by rastatron June 15, 2008 5:37 PM EDT
This is a great editorial piece, notice it falls under opinion courtwatch. Not as news, user jerrystarlin
is a typical reactionary who cant read nor interpret information. Makes me so mad when foolish people speak up and criticize without merit. Learn how to read moron.
Reply to this comment
by tocnwth June 15, 2008 5:38 PM EDT
McCain wants to be a Bush clone and is making headway toward that goal.
He is fast adopting the ways of this administration when he should know that the American people are not going to elect a Bush clone. This country has had enough of the Bush''s and I will bet not another Bush will become president for at least 50 years.
Reply to this comment
by benighse June 15, 2008 5:38 PM EDT
FOLLOWING THE CONSTITUTION IS A GOOD THING.....SO WHAT IS McCAIN AFRAID OF??? IN EFFECT WHAT THE SUPREME COURT HAS SAID IN THIS OPINION IS 1) BRING THE GUANTANOMO DETAINEES/TERRORISTS FORWARD--2) TELL THEM THE CHARGES THEY ARE HELD ON--3) GIVE THEM A TRIAL BY FAIR AMERICAN JURORS--AND 4) UPON CONVICTION EXECUTE THEM OR SENTENCE THEM. AND McCAIN IS OPPOSED TO THIS PROCESS BECAUSE...????? ....IF HE CAN''T AGREE WITH THIS, HE MUST CERTAINLY HAVE LOST HIS MARBLES....WELL HERE''S A BRONX CHEER TO "TOODLES" McCAIN...JUST REMEMBER JOHN, IF YOU GET ELECTED, YOU MUST ACTUALLY SWEAR TO UPHOLD THE UNITED STATES CONSTITUTION AS PART OF YOUR OATH....SO QUIT ATTACKING IT BEFORE THE PUBLIC EVEN CONSIDERS GIVING YOU THAT OPPORTUNITY....McCAIN PROBABLY THINKS THE SUPREME COURT OVERRULING THE DRED SCOTT DECISION WAS THE SECOND WORST DECISION....BYE BYE McCAIN.

Reply to this comment
by roger_inkart June 15, 2008 5:39 PM EDT
So, as Jonh McCain fearmongers and panders to the racical rightwingers...we''re supposed to believe that his administration will be a ''change'' from Bush?
Reply to this comment
by DerbyDaddy June 15, 2008 5:39 PM EDT
Isn''t it interesting to note that it takes almost nothing for all the left wing twinkies to come out swinging with the obscenities about Bush and/or McCain. Their unrelenting support for CBS, given the history that we know, is reason enough for me to reject this opus of journalistic trash.
Reply to this comment
by tocnwth June 15, 2008 5:40 PM EDT
Move of the same, vote for McCain.
He is not losing his marbles, he has already lost them and I think he is also developing Alzheimer''s.
Reply to this comment
by jbalish103 June 15, 2008 5:52 PM EDT
CBS and the Left Wing Morons are going to get us all killed. It''s unbearable reading these utopian comments. I blame the educational system. History has been erased with pie in the sky b.s. CBS might as well be pravda.
Reply to this comment
by da_putnam June 15, 2008 5:56 PM EDT
I have to agree with "jerrystarlin" that much of the article is commentary where the writer speculates about the "reasons" for McCain''s decission. However sound those reasons may be, I don''t see any logical reason for McCain to take this stand. He above all people should know about the injustice of torture and prison camps. With that first hand experience, he should be leading the charge to find a solution to GITMO!

American agents grabbed these people off the street or off the battlefield and they have disappeared into a never ending hell. Our Constitution does not give us the right to keep these people forever (guilty or not). There has to be a resolution. What McCain has done is the politically expedient thing to pander to the Republican far right, but it makes no sense to the rest of us.

McCain seems to have studied the current administration and gleaned the worst characteristics from the players. Should we call him "BuCheney" now?

I am now at a really bad crossroad as a voter. McCain will be another 4-8 years of the Bush/Cheney regime and Obama appears to be a veiled racist, wanting to be friends with everyone, but just waiting to install an activist black federal government. I don''t see how I can place a vote for either camp. Homer Simpson anyone?
Reply to this comment
by danstoned June 15, 2008 5:59 PM EDT
Jewn McCain is no man, he is a litle boy who lost his way being raised in Mississippi to be a dumb Southern Fascist, as the rest of his family heritage.
Reply to this comment
by johnlocke2 June 15, 2008 6:00 PM EDT
President Ronald Reagan signed legislation which apologized for the internment of Japanese Americans on behalf of the U.S. government and stated that government actions had been based on "race prejudice, war hysteria, and a failure of political leadership"

May We Learn from our past?
Reply to this comment
by roger_inkart June 15, 2008 6:04 PM EDT
Isn''t it interesting to note that it takes almost nothing for all the left wing twinkies to come out swinging with the obscenities about Bush and/or McCain.

Posted by DerbyDaddy at 02:39 PM : Jun 15, 2008

...and it''s SO hard to get you rightwing crackpots to come out and spit your bitter indignation at a perceived slight (rolls eyes.) Who are you trying to fool here? You jackasses do it like no one else can.

Go look in a mirror you brainless tool. You are no better than those you bash.
Reply to this comment
by es48 June 15, 2008 6:10 PM EDT
The really frightening thing is that the Senators and Congressmen do not understand the Constitution or its intent. They ignore and violate it on a daily basis.

%u201CHe that would make his own liberty secure must guard even his enemy from oppression, for if he violates this duty he establishes a precedent that will reach to himself.%u201D -Thomas Payne
Reply to this comment
by samraimi-2009 June 15, 2008 6:23 PM EDT
This comment list is silly - just democrats and republicans throwing sounds bites at each other to posture for the elections.

what this story shows is that regardless of the decision, civil rights are often a illusion in the US. they are fine if you are white and live in the suburbs - but in times of "crisis" or if you are a person of color (Sean Bell for example), they often go out the window. how many years have people sat in gitmo with no hearing - completely violating the consitution? this many years later a court decision comes down? too little to late

both republicans and democrats share the blame for this - both parties went on the jingoistic fear-mongering spree after 9/11, voting for the patriot act - to provide cover for invading 2 nations. both parties continue to support this mass-muderous war in Iraq. the US is responsible for the deaths of about 1,000,000 Iraqis (about 300,000 through directly military action, the rest because of the invasion - according to the Lancet studies, which may not be perfect, but use reliable methods) - the democrats could stop the war right now, 40 of them in the senate, by blocking all funding - but they do not because both they and the republicans are pro-war parties.

what this story shows is that the US is a brutal murderous power around the world- both due to the democrats and the republicans, and sometimes this brutality even shows inside the US - or at least in our military bases.

Sam R.
Reply to this comment
by jsilver2th June 15, 2008 6:24 PM EDT
Can you imagine people would actually have access to the federal courts? Gosh that''s so scary!

Old McCain- not even president and he is already above the law and the consitution...

Reply to this comment
by sarsnic June 15, 2008 6:25 PM EDT
How about a proof reader?

"All of which means the Supreme Court isn%u2019t the only reason why the terror detainees remain in legal lingo."

You meant "limbo" right?

nickcooper.com
Reply to this comment
by Republican Jack June 15, 2008 6:30 PM EDT
Our system, our democracy such as it is, depends on ready access to unfiltered information from independent sources as well as availability of differing opinions. John McCain has proven to be a THREAT to that by his own actions. At a lobbyists behest, he wrote a letter to the FCC threatening them with reorganization if they acted to close a loophole allowing single entity control of multiple news sources in a single market. If he was too stupid to know what he was doing that is one thing. If he KNEW what he was doing, that is INFINITELY worse.
Reply to this comment
by sarsnic June 15, 2008 6:33 PM EDT
How about a proof reader?

"All of which means the Supreme Court isn%u2019t the only reason why the terror detainees remain in legal lingo."

You meant "limbo" right?

nickcooper.com
Reply to this comment
by marxbro2 June 15, 2008 6:35 PM EDT
from Websmith1
%u201CHe that would make his own liberty secure must guard even his enemy from oppression, for if he violates this duty he establishes a precedent that will reach to himself.%u201D -Thomas Payne
RIGHT ON!
from jbalish103
"I blame the educational system. History has been erased with pie in the sky b.s."
Also RIGHT ON; too bad he/she has no idea what they are otherwise talking about. What we have been about as a people, what has made us great as a people, has been the grand experiment of our democracy. Few people anymore know its history, workings, or requirements, and this leads to continued elections of the imperial morons we have so repeatedly seen in the White House.
My dad was a right-wing, John Birch Society-embracing ideologue who nonetheless taught me that the end never justifies the means. How sad and frightening that so many people of his mindset have so conveniently(?) forgotten that truth.


Reply to this comment
by stolot100 June 15, 2008 6:40 PM EDT
McInsane is one of the sickest senator''s we have
they fried his brain in VN. Have someone read
The Constitution and The Bill of Rights to him,
I believe he needs to be tutored.
Reply to this comment
by ghostpigeon June 15, 2008 6:40 PM EDT
The courts are there for precisely the reason that McCain seems horrified by: to give prisoners the opportunity to re-examine convictions and incarceration that may be either unjust, or obtained by manipulation of the legal apparatus. This happens often in the American legal system, though normally through civilian courts. Turning over justice to the judgment of the military alone undermines the constitution by its nature and intent The courts are the primary means of countering the power inherent in those who are best armed. The founders understood this as essential to the survival of the republic, knowing that the executive and congress might cave to the emotional reaction of the public when they feel their security is threatened. The courts are a critical part of protecting liberty and democracy when the bloody flag is waved. We''re now at war with a state which had nothing to do with 9-11 because the emotions of Americans were manipulated in the heat of the moment. Torturing prisoners is another such case. For Americans hooked on 24 and numerous movies that portray torture as an effective way to gain "actionable intelligence" we are quick to support it and not examine the information that argues it is not. McCain should know better and does. This is a strictly political ploy and lends support to why the courts are needed in just this situation.
GP

Reply to this comment
by samraimi-2009 June 15, 2008 6:41 PM EDT
This comment list is silly - just democrats and republicans throwing sounds bites at each other to posture for the elections.

what this story shows is that regardless of the decision, civil rights are often a illusion in the US. they are fine if you are white and live in the suburbs - but in times of "crisis" or if you are a person of color (Sean Bell for example), they often go out the window. how many years have people sat in gitmo with no hearing - completely violating the consitution? this many years later a court decision comes down? too little to late

both republicans and democrats share the blame for this - both parties went on the jingoistic fear-mongering spree after 9/11, voting for the patriot act - to provide cover for invading 2 nations. both parties continue to support this mass-muderous war in Iraq. the US is responsible for the deaths of about 1,000,000 Iraqis (about 300,000 through directly military action, the rest because of the invasion - according to the Lancet studies, which may not be perfect, but use reliable methods) - the democrats could stop the war right now, 40 of them in the senate, by blocking all funding - but they do not because both they and the republicans are pro-war parties.

what this story shows is that the US is a brutal murderous power around the world- both due to the democrats and the republicans, and sometimes this brutality even shows inside the US - or at least in our military bases.

Sam R.
Reply to this comment
by ghostpigeon June 15, 2008 6:50 PM EDT
Scuse me ScarlettJ, wasn''t FDR a liberal? And wasn''t the the guy who took us to war against Hitler over the objections of the AMerican right wing who wanted to stay out of WWII?
Reply to this comment
by getcentered June 15, 2008 7:22 PM EDT
Hmmmmmmm....where have Republicans failed America?...........

Ethics: Abramoff Scandals, Libby outs a CIA operative, Gonzo politicizes Justice, and just about anyone in the White House could be labeled a liar, torture, extraordinary rendition, non FISA wiretaps.....etc........

Foreign Policy: Iraq war, AQ still on the loose, Bin Laden still on the loose; and are we safer?..................

Responsive Government: Katrina, bungling Iraq war intelligence, maybe even bungling the 9/11 intelligence......etc.......

I%u2019m going to do everything in my power to see that Republicans LOSE in the next elections. I mean across the board, state legislatures to the White House, there is no longer a place for Republicans in the world I want to live in. The Republican of today is an indefensible talking point repeating polarizer of nations, which in my mind no longer deserves quarter.
Reply to this comment
by RaferJanders June 15, 2008 7:26 PM EDT
I think SONGBIRD was agaist it before he was for it, I love the comments about World War II and Hitler, Prescott Bush was a Banker for your lovable Nazies I find your lack of Historical Knowledge just a product of the Right thinking media. Here is a tip better be quiet and let everyone think you are idiot,then open your mouth and prove it
Reply to this comment
by legalise June 15, 2008 7:33 PM EDT
The U.S. Supreme Court''s ''Guantanamo Ruling'' narrowly upholds our nation''s system of ''Checks and Balances'' by insuring ''judicial review'' of the activities of the Executive Branch of Government.

The ''Guantanamo Ruling'' presents us with a frightfully narrow victory (5-4) that favors the elimination of ''secrecy'' in government activities where ''personal liberties'' are at issue.

The Court''s ruling puts an end to ''The Inquisition error'' committed by our President. The potential for ''abuse of liberties'' has been greatly reduced because ''Gitmo activities'' can now be appealed to a ''public forum'' (a civil court) for judicial review.

The Court''s ruling, in this matter, strikes a ''chord of liberty'' for all people in the Free World.

I understand that when we are in a calamity that extraordinary measures seem attractive. However, to have those ''extraordinary measures'' occur in secrecy and outside of the "Balance of Powers" (judicial review) is tyrannical and can lead to future abuses.

The ''Guantanamo Ruling'' is a subtle restatement of the necessity of judicial review and the maintenance of the balance of power.


Reply to this comment
by legalise June 15, 2008 7:34 PM EDT
The U.S. Supreme Court''s ''Guantanamo Ruling'' narrowly upholds our nation''s system of ''Checks and Balances'' by insuring ''judicial review'' of the activities of the Executive Branch of Government.

The ''Guantanamo Ruling'' presents us with a frightfully narrow victory (5-4) that favors the elimination of ''secrecy'' in government activities where ''personal liberties'' are at issue.

The Court''s ruling puts an end to ''The Inquisition error'' committed by our President. The potential for ''abuse of liberties'' has been greatly reduced because ''Gitmo activities'' can now be appealed to a ''public forum'' (a civil court) for judicial review.

The Court''s ruling, in this matter, strikes a ''chord of liberty'' for all people in the Free World.

I understand that when we are in a calamity that extraordinary measures seem attractive. However, to have those ''extraordinary measures'' occur in secrecy and outside of the "Balance of Powers" (judicial review) is tyrannical and can lead to future abuses.

The ''Guantanamo Ruling'' is a subtle restatement of the necessity of judicial review and the maintenance of the balance of power.


Reply to this comment
by rrjgy39jkjlk June 15, 2008 7:35 PM EDT
getcentered, how can I help?
Reply to this comment
by legalise June 15, 2008 7:38 PM EDT
The U.S. Supreme Court''s ''Guantanamo Ruling'' narrowly upholds our nation''s system of ''Checks and Balances'' by insuring ''judicial review'' of the activities of the Executive Branch of Government.

The ''Guantanamo Ruling'' presents us with a frightfully narrow victory (5-4) that favors the elimination of ''secrecy'' in government activities where ''personal liberties'' are at issue.

The Court''s ruling puts an end to ''The Inquisition error'' committed by our President. The potential for ''abuse of liberties'' has been greatly reduced because ''Gitmo activities'' can now be appealed to a ''public forum'' (a civil court) for judicial review.

The Court''s ruling, in this matter, strikes a ''chord of liberty'' for all people in the Free World.

I understand that when we are in a calamity that extraordinary measures seem attractive. However, to have those ''extraordinary measures'' occur in secrecy and outside of the "Balance of Powers" (judicial review) is tyrannical and can lead to future abuses.

The ''Guantanamo Ruling'' is a subtle restatement of the necessity of judicial review and the maintenance of the balance of power.

Reply to this comment
by legalise June 15, 2008 7:38 PM EDT
The U.S. Supreme Court''s ''Guantanamo Ruling'' narrowly upholds our nation''s system of ''Checks and Balances'' by insuring ''judicial review'' of the activities of the Executive Branch of Government.

The ''Guantanamo Ruling'' presents us with a frightfully narrow victory (5-4) that favors the elimination of ''secrecy'' in government activities where ''personal liberties'' are at issue.

The Court''s ruling puts an end to ''The Inquisition error'' committed by our President. The potential for ''abuse of liberties'' has been greatly reduced because ''Gitmo activities'' can now be appealed to a ''public forum'' (a civil court) for judicial review.

The Court''s ruling, in this matter, strikes a ''chord of liberty'' for all people in the Free World.

I understand that when we are in a calamity that extraordinary measures seem attractive. However, to have those ''extraordinary measures'' occur in secrecy and outside of the "Balance of Powers" (judicial review) is tyrannical and can lead to future abuses.

The ''Guantanamo Ruling'' is a subtle restatement of the necessity of judicial review and the maintenance of the balance of power.

Reply to this comment
by legalise June 15, 2008 7:42 PM EDT
The U.S. Supreme Court''s ''Guantanamo Ruling'' narrowly upholds our nation''s system of ''Checks and Balances'' by insuring ''judicial review'' of the activities of the Executive Branch of Government.

The ''Guantanamo Ruling'' presents us with a frightfully narrow victory (5-4) that favors the elimination of ''secrecy'' in government activities where ''personal liberties'' are at issue.

The Court''s ruling puts an end to ''The Inquisition error'' committed by our President. The potential for ''abuse of liberties'' has been greatly reduced because ''Gitmo activities'' can now be appealed to a ''public forum'' (a civil court) for judicial review.

The Court''s ruling, in this matter, strikes a ''chord of liberty'' for all people in the Free World.

I understand that when we are in a calamity that extraordinary measures seem attractive. However, to have those ''extraordinary measures'' occur in secrecy and outside of the "Balance of Powers" (judicial review) is tyrannical and can lead to future abuses.

The ''Guantanamo Ruling'' is a subtle restatement of the necessity of judicial review and the maintenance of the balance of power.

Reply to this comment
by legalise June 15, 2008 7:42 PM EDT
The U.S. Supreme Court''s ''Guantanamo Ruling'' narrowly upholds our nation''s system of ''Checks and Balances'' by insuring ''judicial review'' of the activities of the Executive Branch of Government.

The ''Guantanamo Ruling'' presents us with a frightfully narrow victory (5-4) that favors the elimination of ''secrecy'' in government activities where ''personal liberties'' are at issue.

The Court''s ruling puts an end to ''The Inquisition error'' committed by our President. The potential for ''abuse of liberties'' has been greatly reduced because ''Gitmo activities'' can now be appealed to a ''public forum'' (a civil court) for judicial review.

The Court''s ruling, in this matter, strikes a ''chord of liberty'' for all people in the Free World.

I understand that when we are in a calamity that extraordinary measures seem attractive. However, to have those ''extraordinary measures'' occur in secrecy and outside of the "Balance of Powers" (judicial review) is tyrannical and can lead to future abuses.

The ''Guantanamo Ruling'' is a subtle restatement of the necessity of judicial review and the maintenance of the balance of power.
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by mcvet June 15, 2008 7:43 PM EDT
I''ve seen people like McCain before... In the MILITARY! This guy has NO respect for OUR RIGHTS what so ever. YOU put this guy in charge of OUR military and you can flat out write off your RIGHTS, UNLESS you belong to the "Party". In other words ANY right you have that doesn''t match the Neocon MESSAGE, is of NO value. THIS MAN IS A DICTATOR in WAITING people. YOU think BUSH has no respect for the Constitution??? This little GENERAL would have far less... take my word on it!! SIEG HEIL BUSH
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by andor3 June 15, 2008 7:45 PM EDT
"GEORGE W. BUSH THE GREATEST TERRORISTS HUNTER IN HISTORY WORKED HARD TO CATCH THOSE GUYS."

what guys? The ones who have not been charged with any crime? The ones who have been unconstitutionally detained for years without seeing any evidence against them? The ones who may have been captured by mistake, who may not have started with bad feelings toward the U.S., but have been converted, by GWB, into radical terrorists filled with hate?

If the governement does not have the evidence to hold them, then they should be freed. It is an embarrassment to the U.S. that it took a Supreme Court ruling to make it happen.
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by mcvet June 15, 2008 7:45 PM EDT
GEORGE W. BUSH THE GREATEST TERRORISTS HUNTER IN HISTORY WORKED HARD TO CATCH THOSE GUYS. NOW THE SUPREME COURT WANTS TO FREE THEM ALL JUST TO PLEASE THE EMPEROR BARRACK OSAMA WHO HAS CRITICIZED BUSH FOR KEEPING HIS BROTHER MUSLIM IN GITMO WITHOUT CHARGES. THATS WHAT BARRACK OSAMA WANTS THATS WHAT HE WILL GET.


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Posted by BagdadsHere2 at 04:10 PM : Jun 15, 2008
+ report abuse

Sparky! With the RECORD of George W. Bush and his creditablity with the American People... THIS IS NOT your best argument... NOT CLOSE!! Sieg Heil!!
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by mcvet June 15, 2008 7:46 PM EDT
If the governement does not have the evidence to hold them, then they should be freed. It is an embarrassment to the U.S. that it took a Supreme Court ruling to make it happen.


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Posted by andor3 at 04:45 PM : Jun 15, 2008
+ report abuse

EXCELLENT POINT!! With what we''ve seen out of the Bush Administration to this point THAT is the ONLY sane thing to do!! These people are so INCOMPETENT they would screw up a game of checkers!! Sieg Heil Bush
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by harrydoghiny June 15, 2008 7:55 PM EDT
McBush and his partner, LinzyGram will soon attempt another end-run around the Supreme Court. Good luck with that one, boys. Want a third term? Vote MCBUSH.
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by hoseobama June 15, 2008 7:59 PM EDT
Yeah - I think we should allow all terrorists to go free. Forget about sanity, this is their right to kill us!
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