Originally posted by: BarrySotero
Originally posted by: jonks
Originally posted by: BarrySotero
Obama's ideology is crystal clear when you top making excuses for him
First, CIA lawyers forging "legal opinions" stating what Cheney & Co. told them to put in them is malpractice at best. But I'm not aware of the DoJ pursuing legal claims against these authors. I believe Holder is investigating interrogators who went even beyond the illegal limits proscribed in the torture memos.
And cite one person speaking on behalf of the admin that has recommended subordinating US law wrt free speech to comply with international dictates or UN resolutions. Please, I'd like to read that.
As to your final statement, you've previously stated that you believe Obama hates America and got elected for the specific purpose of destroying the country. How you expect anyone to take anything you say seriously is beyond me.
Well its quite hysterical but Obama was saying that the CIA agents were in the clear since they were just "following orders" and Holder was saying the the agents needed to be investigated even though they were following "legal orders". They don't know if they are coming or going. Holder and Co and know Spain and others are looking to press charges against US gov officials and they don't mind at all.
As for free speech and international standards you are not familiar with Koh (appointed to State Dept - thinks Sharia law has a place in US) I see. Here's some bits:
"Harold Koh, who praises a ?penetrating essay? by Michael Ignatieff that criticizes (in Koh?s summary) ?America?s human-rights narcissism, particularly in its embrace of the First Amendment and its nonembrace of certain rights ? such as economic, social, and cultural rights ? that are widely accepted throughout the rest of the world.?
But don?t worry: Koh proceeds to ?distinguish among four somewhat different faces of American exceptionalism . . . in order of ascending opprobrium.? The first face ? the one that Koh finds least opprobrious, is America?s ?distinctive rights culture,? which gives ?First Amendment protections for speech and religion . . . far greater emphasis and judicial protection in America than in Europe or Asia.? Fortunately, Koh does ?not find this distinctiveness too deeply unsettling to world order? or ?fundamentally inconsistent with universal human values.? So it can be tolerated, at least to some extent and at least under existing ?European Union law?:
The judicial doctrine of ?margin of appreciation,? familiar in European Union law, permits sufficient national variance as to promote tolerance of some measure of this kind of rights distinctiveness.
But, Koh warns in a footnote, ?our exceptional free speech tradition can cause problems abroad, as, for example, may occur when hate speech is disseminated over the Internet.? The Supreme Court ?can moderate these conflicts by applying more consistently the transnationalist approach to judicial interpretation? that Koh advocates (and which I?m exploring in an ongoing series of posts on Bench Memos). "
Keep in mind too that Cass Sunstein has written extensively about being able to regulate internet rumors - even in comment sections of papers and blogs. The bats are in the belfy.